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Query: EC:1.9.3.1 (
cytochrome oxidase
)
8,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mutations in the
COX17
gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cause a respiratory deficiency due to a block in the production of a functional
cytochrome oxidase
complex. Because cox17 mutants are able to express both the mitochondrially and nuclearly encoded subunits of
cytochrome oxidase
, the Cox17p most likely affects some late posttranslational step of the assembly pathway. A fragment of yeast nuclear DNA capable of complementing the mutation has been cloned by transformation of the cox17 mutant with a library of genomic DNA. Subcloning and sequencing of the
COX17
gene revealed that it codes for a cysteine-rich protein with a molecular weight of 8,057. Unlike other previously described accessory factors involved in
cytochrome oxidase
assembly, all of which are components of mitochondria, Cox17p is a cytoplasmic protein. The cytoplasmic location of Cox17p suggested that it might have a function in delivery of a prosthetic group to the holoenzyme. A requirement of Cox17p in providing the copper prosthetic group of
cytochrome oxidase
is supported by the finding that a cox17 null mutant is rescued by the addition of copper to the growth medium. Evidence is presented indicating that Cox17p is not involved in general copper metabolism in yeast but rather has a more specific function in the delivery of copper to mitochondria.
...
PMID:Characterization of COX17, a yeast gene involved in copper metabolism and assembly of cytochrome oxidase. 866 33
C129/U1 is a respiratory defective mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae arrested in
cytochrome oxidase
assembly due to a mutation in
COX17
, a nuclear gene encoding a low molecular weight cytoplasmic protein proposed to function in mitochondrial copper recruitment. In the present study we show that the respiratory defect of C129/U1 is rescuable by two multicopy suppressors, SCO1 and SCO2. SCO1 was earlier reported to code for a mitochondrial inner membrane protein with an essential function in
cytochrome oxidase
assembly (Buchwald, P., Krummeck, G., and Rodel, G. (1991) Mol. Gen. Genet. 229, 413-420). SCO2 is a homologue of SCO1, whose product is also localized in the mitochondrial membrane but is not required for respiration. SCO1 also suppresses a cox17 null mutant, indicating that overexpression of Sco1p can compensate for the absence of Cox17p. In contrast, neither copper,
COX17
on a multicopy plasmid, or a combination of the two is able to restore respiration in sco1 mutants. Rescue of cox17 mutants by Sco1p suggests that this mitochondrial protein plays a role either in mitochondrial copper transport or insertion of copper into the active site of
cytochrome oxidase
. Although SCO2 can also partially restore respiratory growth in the cox17 null mutant, rescue in this case requires addition of copper to the growth medium. SCO2 does not suppress a sco1 null mutant, although it is able to partially rescue a sco1 point mutant. We interpret the ability of SCO2 to restore respiration in cox17, but not in sco1 mutants, to indicate that Sco1p and Sco2p have overlapping but not identical functions.
...
PMID:SCO1 and SCO2 act as high copy suppressors of a mitochondrial copper recruitment defect in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 870 95
The
COX17
gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae codes for a cytoplasmic protein essential for the expression of functional
cytochrome oxidase
. This protein has been implicated in targeting copper to mitochondria. To determine if Cox17p is present in mammalian cells, a yeast strain carrying a null mutation in
COX17
was transformed with a human cDNA expression library. All the respiratory competent clones obtained from the transformations carried a common cDNA sequence with a reading frame predicting a product homologous to yeast Cox17p. The cloning of a mammalian
COX17
homolog suggests that the encoded product is likely to function in copper recruitment in eucaryotic cells in general. Its presence in humans provides a possible target for genetically inherited deficiencies in
cytochrome oxidase
.
...
PMID:Isolation of a cDNA encoding the human homolog of COX17, a yeast gene essential for mitochondrial copper recruitment. 905 Sep 18
Cox17p was previously shown to be essential for the expression of
cytochrome oxidase
in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In the present study
COX17
has been placed under the control of the GAL10 promoter in an autonomously replicating plasmid. A yeast transformant harboring the high copy construct was used to purify Cox17p to homogeneity. Purified Cox17p contains 0.2-0.3 mol of copper per mol of protein. The molar copper content is increased to 1.8 after incubation of Cox17p in the presence of a 6-fold molar excess of cuprous chloride under reduced conditions. An antibody against Cox17p was obtained by immunization of rabbits with a carboxyl-terminal peptide coupled to bovine serum albumin. The antiserum detects Cox17p in both the mitochondrial and soluble protein fractions of wild type yeast and of the transformant overexpressing Cox17p. Exposure of intact mitochondria to hypotonic conditions causes most of Cox17p to be released as a soluble protein indicating that the mitochondrial fraction of Cox17p is localized in the intermembrane space. These results are consistent with the previously proposed function of Cox17p, namely in providing cytoplasmic copper for mitochondrial utilization.
...
PMID:Purification, characterization, and localization of yeast Cox17p, a mitochondrial copper shuttle. 940 7
We have found that the gel filtration fraction of porcine heart extract clearly promoted the survival of NIH3T3 fibroblast cells in the serum-free medium condition. A structural analysis showed that the active fraction contained a novel peptide, porcine Cox17p (p-Cox17p), which was recently reported by Chen et al. as dopuin (Z. W. Chen et al., Eur. J. Biochem. 249 (1997) 518-522). Porcine Cox17p/dopuin possesses high sequence homology to the product of human
COX17
gene (h-Cox17p). Although Cox17p has been implied to be involved in copper recruitment to mitochondria and in the functional assembly of
cytochrome oxidase
in yeast, its role in mammalian cells is unknown. In this study, we chemically synthesized p-Cox17p to investigate its biological effects. Refolding experiments of synthesized linear p-Cox17p revealed the existence of mostly one pattern of three intrachain disulfide bridges similar to that of native p-Cox17p, because the main oxidized p-Cox17p was completely co-eluted with the natural product. The addition of heavy metal ions such as copper, zinc and cadmium significantly inhibited the formation of the oxidized form, suggesting that reduced p-Cox17p may interact directly with these metal ions. The reduced and oxidized forms of p-Cox17p were also confirmed to promote the survival of NIH3T3 cells in serum-free medium as observed with the natural product, indicating that Cox17p may be a bioactive peptide.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of Cox17p from porcine heart by determining its survival-promoting activity in NIH3T3 cells. 1056 64
The copper metallochaperone Cox17 is proposed to shuttle Cu(I) ions to the mitochondrion for the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase. The Cu(I) ions are liganded by cysteinyl thiolates. Mutational analysis on the yeast Cox17 reveals three of the seven cysteinyl residues to be critical for Cox17 function, and these three residues are present in a Cys-Cys-Xaa-Cys sequence motif. Single substitution of any of these three cysteines with serines results in a nonfunctional
cytochrome oxidase
complex. Cells harboring such a mutation fail to grow on nonfermentable carbon sources and have no cytochrome c oxidase activity in isolated mitochondria. Wild-type Cox17 purified as untagged protein binds three Cu(I) ions/molecule. Mutant proteins lacking only one of these critical Cys residues retain the ability to bind three Cu(I) ions and are imported within the mitochondria. In contrast, Cox17 molecules with a double Cys --> Ser mutation exhibit no Cu(I) binding but are still localized to the mitochondria. Thus, mitochondrial uptake of Cox17 is not restricted to the Cu(I) conformer of Cox17.
COX17
was originally cloned by virtue of complementation of a mutant containing a nonfunctional Cys --> Tyr substitution at codon 57. The mutant C57Y Cox17 fails to accumulate within the mitochondria but retains the ability to bind three Cu(I) ions. A C57S Cox17 variant is functional, and a quadruple Cox17 mutant with C16S/C36S/C47S/C57S substitutions binds three Cu(I) ions. Thus, only three cysteinyl residues are important for the ligation of three Cu(I) ions. A novel mode of Cu(I) binding is predicted.
...
PMID:Mutational analysis of the mitochondrial copper metallochaperone Cox17. 1097 Aug 96
Deficiencies in
cytochrome oxidase
(
COX
), the terminal enzyme of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, are relatively rare but most often lethal. The underlying causes are beginning to be elucidated, and most mutations are thought to affect the function of proteins involved in assembling the holoenzyme.
COX17
is such an assembly protein and is thought to recruit copper to mitochondria for incorporation into the
COX
apoenzyme. Here we present the gene structure, the expression, and chromosomal localization for
COX17
, a candidate gene for
COX
deficiency. The COXI 7 gene spans approximately 8 kb of human genomic DNA and encodes a transcript of approximately 450 bp that is expressed in all tissues tested. Although the
COX17
gene was previously mapped to chromosome 13q14-21, our results suggest that a
COX17
pseudogene maps to this region. The pseudogene contains several nucleotide changes, including one that would result in an altered amino acid in the putative copper binding domain. We have localized the gene encoding the
COX
17 protein to the long arm of chromosome 3 by radiation hybrid mapping. Deciphering of the
COX17
genomic structure will allow this gene to be assessed for mutations in
COX
deficient patients.
...
PMID:Characterization and localization of human COX17, a gene involved in mitochondrial copper transport. 1098 38
One of the central tenets in neuroscience has been that the protein constituents of distal compartments of the neuron (e.g., the axon and nerve terminal) are synthesized in the nerve cell body and are subsequently transported to their ultimate sites of function. In contrast to this postulate, we have established previously that a heterogeneous population of mRNAs and biologically active polyribosomes exist in the giant axon and presynaptic nerve terminals of the photoreceptor neurons in squid. We report that these mRNA populations contain mRNAs for nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins to include:
cytochrome oxidase
subunit 17, propionyl-CoA carboxylase (EC 6.4.1.3), dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (EC 1.8.1.4), and coenzyme Q subunit 7. The mRNA for heat shock protein 70, a chaperone protein known to be involved in the import of proteins into mitochondria, has also been identified. Electrophoretic gel analysis of newly synthesized proteins in the synaptosomal fraction isolated from the squid optic lobe revealed that the large presynaptic terminals of the photoreceptor neuron contain a cytoplasmic protein synthetic system. Importantly, a significant amount of the cycloheximide resistant proteins locally synthesized in the terminal becomes associated with mitochondria. PCR analysis of RNA from synaptosomal polysomes establishes that
COX17
and CoQ7 mRNAs are being actively translated. Taken together, these findings indicate that proteins required for the maintenance of mitochondrial function are synthesized locally in the presynaptic nerve terminal, and call attention to the intimacy of the relationship between the terminal and its energy generating system. J. Neurosci. Res. 64:447-453, 2001. Published 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
...
PMID:Local synthesis of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins in the presynaptic nerve terminal. 1139 99
We have identified a new plant gene, AtCOX17, encoding a protein that shares sequence similarity to
COX17
, a Cu-binding protein from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and vertebrates that mediates the delivery of Cu to the mitochondria for the assembly of a functional
cytochrome oxidase
complex. The newly characterized Arabidopsis protein has six Cys residues at positions corresponding to those known to coordinate Cu binding in the yeast homolog. Moreover, we show that the Arabidopsis
COX17
cDNA complements a
COX17
mutant of yeast restoring the respiratory deficiency associated with that mutation. These two lines of evidence indicate that the plant protein identified here is a functional equivalent of yeast
COX17
and might serve as a Cu delivery protein for the plant mitochondria.
COX17
was identified by investigating the hypersensitive response-like necrotic response provoked in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) leaves after harpin inoculation. AtCOX17 expression was activated by high concentrations of Cu, bacterial inoculation, salicylic acid treatment, and treatments that generated NO and hydrogen peroxide. All of the conditions inducing
COX17
are known to inhibit mitochondrial respiration and to produce an increase of reactive oxygen species, suggesting that gene induction occurs in response to stress situations that interfere with mitochondrial function.
...
PMID:AtCOX17, an Arabidopsis homolog of the yeast copper chaperone COX17. 1217 98
Deletion of reading frame YHR116W of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae nuclear genome elicits a respiratory deficiency. The encoded product, here named Cox23p, is shown to be required for the expression of
cytochrome oxidase
. Cox23p is homologous to Cox17p, a water-soluble copper protein previously implicated in the maturation of the Cu(A) center of
cytochrome oxidase
. The respiratory defect of a cox23 null mutant is rescued by high concentrations of copper in the medium but only when the mutant harbors
COX17
on a high copy plasmid. Overexpression of Cox17p by itself is not a sufficient condition to rescue the mutant phenotype. Cox23p, like Cox17p, is detected in the intermembrane space of mitochondria and in the postmitochondrial supernatant fraction, the latter consisting predominantly of cytosolic proteins. Because Cox23p and Cox17p are not part of a complex, the requirement of both for
cytochrome oxidase
assembly suggests that they function in a common pathway with Cox17p acting downstream of Cox23p.
...
PMID:COX23, a homologue of COX17, is required for cytochrome oxidase assembly. 1514 42
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