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Query: EC:1.6.5.3 (
complex I
)
8,901
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Low rates of evolution in cnidarian mitochondrial genes such as COI and 16S rDNA have hindered molecular systematic studies in this important invertebrate group. We sequenced fragments of 3 mitochondrial protein-coding genes (
NADH dehydrogenase
subunits ND2, ND3 and
ND6
) as well as the COI-COII intergenic spacer, the longest noncoding region found in the octocoral mitochondrial genome, to determine if any of these regions contain levels of variation sufficient for reconstruction of phylogenetic relationships among genera of the anthozoan subclass Octocorallia. Within and between the soft coral families Alcyoniidae and Xeniidae, sequence divergence in the genes ND2 (539 bp), ND3 (102 bp), and
ND6
(444 bp) ranged from 0.5% to 12%, with the greatest pairwise distances between the 2 families. The COI-COII intergenic spacer varied in length from 106 to 122 bp, and pairwise sequence divergence values ranged from 0% to 20.4%. Phylogenetic trees constructed using each region separately were poorly resolved. Better phylogenetic resolution was obtained in a combined analysis using all 3 protein-coding regions (1085 bp total). Although relationships among some pairs of species and genera were well supported in the combined analysis, the base of the alcyoniid family tree remained an unresolved polytomy. We conclude that variation in the NADH subunit coding regions is adequate to resolve phylogenetic relationships among families and some genera of Octocorallia, but insufficient for most species - or population-level studies. Although the COI-COII intergenic spacer exhibits greater variability than the protein-coding regions and may contain useful species-specific markers, its short length limits its phylogenetic utility.
...
PMID:Variation in coding (NADH dehydrogenase subunits 2, 3, and 6) and noncoding intergenic spacer regions of the mitochondrial genome in Octocorallia (Cnidaria: Anthozoa). 1572 54
The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from the salmon louse, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, is 15445 bp. It includes the genes coding for cytochrome B (Cyt B), ATPase subunit 6 and 8 (A6 and A8),
NADH dehydrogenase
subunits 1-6 and 4L (ND1, ND2, ND3, ND4, ND4L, ND5 and
ND6
), cytochrome c oxidase subunits I-III (COI, COII and COIII), two rRNA genes (12S rRNA and 16S rRNA) and 22 tRNAs. Two copies of tRNA-Lys are present in the mtDNA of L. salmonis, while tRNA-Cys was not identified. Both DNA strands contain coding regions in the salmon louse, in contrast to the other copepod characterized Tigriopus japonicus, but only a few genes overlap. In vertebrates, ND4 and ND4L are transcribed as one bicistronic mRNA, and are therefore localized together. The same organization is also found in crustaceans, with the exceptions of T. japonicus, Neocalanus cristatus and L. salmonis that deviate from this pattern. Another exception of the L. salmonis mtDNA is that A6 and A8 do not overlap, but are separated by several genes. The protein-coding genes have a bias towards AT-rich codons. The mitochondrial gene order in L. salmonis differs significantly from the copepods T. japonicus, Eucalanus bungii, N. cristatus and the other 13 crustaceans previously characterized. Furthermore, the mitochondrial rRNA genes are encoded on opposite strands in L. salmonis. This has not been found in any other arthropods, but has been reported in two starfish species. In a phylogenetic analysis, using an alignment of mitochondrial protein sequences, L. salmonis groups together with T. japonicus, being distant relatives to the other crustaceans.
...
PMID:Genetic characterization of the mitochondrial DNA from Lepeophtheirus salmonis (Crustacea; Copepoda). A new gene organization revealed. 1598 68
Leigh syndrome can result from both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA defects. Mutations in complex V genes of the respiratory chain were considered until recently as the most frequent cause for mitochondrial inherited Leigh syndrome, while gene defects in
complex I
were related to recessive Leigh syndrome. Recently few reports of mutations in the mitochondrial-encoded
complex I
subunit genes causing Leigh syndrome have been reported. We describe a 1-month-old baby who acutely deteriorated, with abrupt onset of brainstem dysfunction, due to basal ganglia lesions extending to the brainstem. A muscle biopsy demonstrated
complex I
deficiency. Subsequent analysis of the mitochondrial genome revealed a homoplastic T10191C mutation in the ND3 gene (in blood and muscle), resulting in a substitution of serine to proline. Hair root analysis revealed a 50% mutant load, reflecting heteroplasmy in early embryonic stages. The mutation was also detected in his mother (5%). Western blot analysis revealed a decrease of the 20 kDa subunit (likely
ND6
) and of the 30 kDa subunit (NDUFA9), which is probably due to instability attributed to the inability to form subcomplexes with ND3. This is the first description of infantile Leigh syndrome due to a maternally transmitted T10191C substitution in ND3 and not due to a de novo mutation. This mutation is age and tissue dependent and therefore may not be amenable to prenatal testing.
...
PMID:Fulminant neurological deterioration in a neonate with Leigh syndrome due to a maternally transmitted missense mutation in the mitochondrial ND3 gene. 1602 78
The application of two-dimensional electrophoresis for the identification of hydrophobic membrane proteins is principally hampered by precipitation of many of these proteins during first-dimension, isoelectric focusing. Therefore new strategies towards the identification and characterization of membrane proteins are being developed. In this work we present a direct and rapid approach from blue-native gels to mass spectrometry, which allows the analyses of complete complexes and prevents protein aggregation of hydrophobic regions during electrophoresis. We combine blue-native gel electrophoresis and liquid chromatography--nanospray-iontrap tandem mass spectrometry to analyze the composition of oxidative phosphorylation complexes I, III, IV and V from bovine-heart mitochondria as a model system containing a number of highly hydrophobic proteins. Bands from blue-native gels were subjected either to in-gel or to in-solution tryptic digestion. The obtained peptide mixtures were further analyzed by liquid chromatography--tandem mass spectrometry and the corresponding proteins were identified by database search. From a total of 86 proteins, 67 protein subunits could be identified including all highly hydrophobic components, except the ND4L and
ND6
subunits of
complex I
. We demonstrate that liquid chromatography--tandem mass spectrometry combined to blue-native electrophoresis is a straightforward tool for proteomic analysis of multiprotein complexes, and especially for the identification of very hydrophobic membrane protein constituents that are not accessible by common isoelectric focusing/sodium dodecyl sulphate gel electrophoresis.
...
PMID:LC-nanospray-MS/MS analysis of hydrophobic proteins from membrane protein complexes isolated by blue-native electrophoresis. 1612 64
Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is associated with mitochondrial DNA point mutations affecting different subunits of
complex I
. By replacing glucose with galactose in the medium, cybrids harboring each of the three LHON pathogenic mutations (11778/ND4, 3460/ND1, 14484/
ND6
) suffered a profound ATP depletion over a few hours and underwent apoptotic cell death, which was caspase-independent. Control cybrids were unaffected. In addition to cytochrome c, apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) and endonuclease G (EndoG) were also released from the mitochondria into the cytosol in LHON cybrids, but not in control cells. Exposure of isolated nuclei to cytosolic fractions from LHON cybrids maintained in galactose medium caused nuclear fragmentation, which was strongly reduced by immuno-depletion with anti-AIF and anti-EndoG antibodies. In conclusion, the caspase-independent death of LHON cybrids incubated in galactose medium is triggered by rapid ATP depletion and mediated by AIF and EndoG.
...
PMID:Caspase-independent death of Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy cybrids is driven by energetic failure and mediated by AIF and Endonuclease G. 1615 35
We have studied the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in transmitochondrial cells, harboring homoplasmic levels of the T14487C mtDNA mutation in the
ND6
gene of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Previous work has shown that this mutation causes
complex I
deficiency. Here, we show that this mutation causes an overproduction of ROS leading to an increase in the oxidation of lipids and mtDNA without modification of antioxidant enzyme activities. We suggest that mutations in mtDNA affecting
complex I
activity may result in oxidative cellular damage, and reinforce the possible role of ROS-mediated mechanisms participating in some mtDNA-related disorders.
...
PMID:Free radicals-mediated damage in transmitochondrial cells harboring the T14487C mutation in the ND6 gene of mtDNA. 1633 95
Previously, we characterized a mouse cell line, 4A, carrying a mitochondrial DNA mutation in the subunit for respiratory
complex I
,
NADH dehydrogenase
, in the
ND6
gene. This mutation abolished the
complex I
assembly and disrupted the respiratory function of
complex I
. We now report here that a galactose-resistant clone, 4AR, was isolated from the cells carrying the
ND6
mutation. 4AR still contained the homoplasmic mutation, and apparently there was no
ND6
protein synthesis, whereas the assembly of other
complex I
subunits into
complex I
was recovered. Furthermore, the respiratory activity and mitochondrial membrane potential were fully recovered. To investigate the genetic origin of this compensation, the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from 4AR was transferred to a new nuclear background. The transmitochondrial lines failed to grow in galactose medium. We further transferred mtDNA with a nonsense mutation at the ND5 gene to the 4AR nuclear background, and a suppression for mitochondrial deficiency was observed. Our results suggest that change(s) in the expression of a certain nucleus-encoded factor(s) can compensate for the absence of the
ND6
or ND5 subunit.
...
PMID:Nuclear suppression of mitochondrial defects in cells without the ND6 subunit. 1642 59
Loss of mitochondrial
complex I
catalytic activity in the electron transport chain (ETC) is found in multiple tissues from individuals with sporadic Parkinson's disease (PD) and is a property of some PD model neurotoxins. Using special ETC subunit-specific and
complex I
immunocapture antibodies directed against the entire
complex I
macroassembly, we quantified ETC proteins and protein oxidation of
complex I
subunits in brain mitochondria from 10 PD and 12 age-matched control (CTL) samples. We measured nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH)-driven electron transfer rates through
complex I
and correlated these with
complex I
subunit oxidation levels and reductions of its 8 kDa subunit. PD brain
complex I
shows 11% increase in
ND6
, 34% decrease in its 8 kDa subunit and contains 47% more protein carbonyls localized to catalytic subunits coded for by mitochondrial and nuclear genomes We found no changes in levels of ETC proteins from complexes II-V. Oxidative damage patterns to PD
complex I
are reproduced by incubation of CTL brain mitochondria with NADH in the presence of rotenone but not by exogenous oxidant. NADH-driven electron transfer rates through
complex I
inversely correlate with
complex I
protein oxidation status and positively correlate with reduction in PD 8 kDa subunit. Reduced
complex I
function in PD brain mitochondria appears to arise from oxidation of its catalytic subunits from internal processes, not from external oxidative stress, and correlates with
complex I
misassembly. This
complex I
auto-oxidation may derive from abnormalities in mitochondrial or nuclear encoded subunits,
complex I
assembly factors, rotenone-like
complex I
toxins, or some combination.
...
PMID:Parkinson's disease brain mitochondrial complex I has oxidatively damaged subunits and is functionally impaired and misassembled. 1668 18
Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a maternally inherited form of retinal ganglion cell degeneration leading to optic atrophy in young adults. Several mutations in different genes can cause LHON (heterogeneity). The
ND6
gene is one of the mitochondrial genes that encodes subunit 6 of
complex I
of the respiratory chain. This gene is a hot spot gene. Fourteen Persian LHON patients were analyzed with single-strand conformational polymorphism and DNA sequencing techniques. None of these patients had four primary mutations, G3460A, G11788A, T14484C, and G14459A, related to this disease. We identified twelve nucleotide substitutions, G13702C, T13879C, T14110C, C14167T, G14199T, A14233G, G14272C, A14290G, G14365C, G14368C, T14766C, and T14798C. Eleven of twelve nucleotide substitutions had already been reported as polymorphism. One of the nucleotide substitutions (A14290G) has not been reported. The A14290G nucleotide substitution does not change its amino acid (glutamic acid). We looked for base conservation using DNA star software (MEGALIGN program) as a criterion for pathogenic or nonpathogenic nucleotide substitution in A14290G. The results of
ND6
gene alignment in humans and in other species (mouse, cow, elegans worm, and Neurospora crassa mold) revealed that the 14290th base was not conserved. Fifty normal controls were also investigated for this polymorphism in the Iranian population and two had A14290G polymorphism (4%). This study provides evidence that the mtDNA A14290G allele is a new nonpathogenic polymorphism. We suggest follow-up studies regarding this polymorphism in different populations.
...
PMID:Identification of a new human mtDNA polymorphism (A14290G) in the NADH dehydrogenase subunit 6 gene. 1675 77
Here we propose shotgun proteomics as an alternative method to gel-based bottom-up proteomic platform for the structural characterization of mitochondrial
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(complex I). The approach is based on simultaneous identification of subunits after global digestion of the intact complex. Resulting mixture of tryptic peptides is purified, concentrated, separated and online analyzed using nano-scale reverse-phase nano-ESI-MS/MS in a single information dependent acquisition mode. The usefulness of the method is demonstrated in our work on the well described model system of
complex I
from bovine heart mitochondria. The shotgun method led to the identification and partial sequence characterization of 42 subunits representing more than 95% coverage of the complex. In particular, almost all nuclear (except MLRQ) and 5 mitochondria DNA encoded subunits (except ND4L and
ND6
) were identified. Furthermore, it was possible to identify 30 co-purified proteins of the inner mitochondrial membrane structurally not belonging to
complex I
. The method's efficiency is shown by comparing it to two classical 1 D gel-based strategies. Shotgun proteomics is less laborious, significantly faster and requires less sample material with minimal treatment, facilitating the screening for post-translational modifications and quantitative and qualitative differences of
complex I
subunits in genetic disorders.
...
PMID:Shotgun proteomics for the characterization of subunit composition of mitochondrial complex I. 1687 6
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