Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The nucleotide sequence of the wheat mitochondrial gene for subunit 6 (atp6) of the F1F0 ATPase complex has been determined. Unlike bacterial, chloroplast or animal/fungal mitochondrial atp6 counterparts, which encode proteins of about 230-270 amino acids, the wheat mitochondrial atp6 homologue comprises the latter part of an open reading frame (ORF) of 386 codons. The ATP6 protein may therefore by synthesized with a long N-terminal presequence. This is supported by the finding that the ORF is preceded by a conserved sequence block closely related to ones preceding several other actively transcribed wheat mitochondrial protein-coding genes. The fused upstream ORF is similar in length, but unrelated in sequence, to those preceding the maize and tobacco mitochondrial atp6 genes. In wheat, the atp6 gene is located on a recombinationally active repeated DNA element, whose length of 1.4 kb corresponds approximately to that of the atp6 mRNA. A comparison of the wheat and maize ATP6 sequences reveals unexpectedly high divergence in the region corresponding to the mature N-terminal domain and may reflect mitochondrial DNA rearrangements during atp6 gene evolution in monocotyledonous plants.
...
PMID:Sequence analysis of the wheat mitochondrial atp6 gene reveals a fused upstream reading frame and markedly divergent N termini among plant ATP6 proteins. 290 99

Respiratory-competent nuclear mutants have been isolated which presented a cryosensitive phenotype on a non-fermentative carbon source, due to a dysfunctioning of the mitochondrial F1-Fo ATP synthase which results from a relative defect in subunits 6 and 8 of the Fo sector. Both proteins are mtDNA-encoded, but the defect is due to the simultaneous presence of a mutation in two unlinked nuclear genes (NCA2 and NCA3, for Nuclear Control of ATPase) promoting a modification of the expression of the ATP8-ATP6 co-transcript (formerly denoted AAP1-OLI2). This co-transcript matures at a unique site to give two cotranscripts of 5.2 and 4.6 kb in length: in the mutant, the 5.2-kb co-transcript was greatly lowered. NCA3 was isolated from a wild-type yeast genomic library by genetic complementation. The level of the 5.2-kb transcript, like the synthesis of subunits 6 and 8, was partly restored in the transformed strain. A 1011-nucleotide ORF was identified that encodes an hydrophilic protein of 35417 Da. Disruption of chromosomal DNA within the reading frame promoted a dramatic decrease of the 5.2-kb mRNA but did not abolish the respiratory competence of a wild-type strain. NCA3 is located on chromosome IV and produces a single 1780-b transcript.
...
PMID:NCA3, a nuclear gene involved in the mitochondrial expression of subunits 6 and 8 of the Fo-F1 ATP synthase of S. cerevisiae. 758 26

The germinating asexual spores (conidia) of Neurospora crassa were employed to study steps in the accumulation of transcripts of groups of mitochondrial genes, including those for peptide subunits of cytochrome c oxidase (CO), ATPase (ATP), and apocytochrome b (COB). Physically clustered groups of genes were expressed as cohorts: transcripts of the ATP8-ATP6-mtATP9-CO2 genes were almost undetectable in the dormant spores, and they accumulated rapidly as a group immediately after spore activation. Transcripts of COB and the adjacent CO1 were abundant in the dormant spores, and the dormant and germinating spores contained size forms of the COB transcripts that were not evident in vegetative cells. Polyribosomes were prepared from mitochondrial lysates, and the polyribosomal RNA was probed to identify the mRNAs of specific genes; in several instances polycistronic mRNAs were present in the polyribosomes as were the smaller end-products of the inferred transcript processing pathways. The expression of the physically dispersed genes for subunit peptides of cytochrome c oxidase appears to be regulated to the level of translation; these transcripts are accumulated in the total mitochondrial RNA with sharply different kinetics, but they appeared in the polyribosomes uniformly, their appearance correlating with the uniform synthesis of the subunit peptides. Transcripts for a previously reported non-functional mitochondrial gene, homologous to the functional nuclear gene for ATPase subunit 9, were found in the germinating spores, but were not detected in vegetative cells. These mtATP9 transcripts were also present in the polyribosomes and were apparently translated into a protein in vivo whose synthesis was insensitive to cycloheximide and detectable with an anti-ATP9 subunit antibody. Transcripts for two nuclear genes for mitochondrially localized proteins, ATP9 and CO5, were accumulated in unison and especially rapidly during spore germination.
...
PMID:Expression of mitochondrial genes in the germinating conidia of Neurospora crassa. 828 26

A maternally inherited and practically homoplasmic mitochondrial (mtDNA) mutation, 8527A>G, changing the initiation codon AUG into GUG, normally coding for a valine, was observed in the ATP6 gene encoding the ATPase subunit a. No alternate Met codon could replace the normal translational initiator. The patient harboring this mutation exhibited clinical symptoms suggesting a mitochondrial disease but his mother who carried the same mtDNA mutation was healthy. The mutation was absent from 100 controls and occurred once amongst 44 patients suspected of Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) but devoid of typical LHON mutations. In patient fibroblasts, no effect of 8527A>G mutation could be demonstrated on the biosynthesis of mtDNA-encoded proteins, on size and the content of ATPase subunit a, on ATP hydrolysis and on mitochondrial membrane potential. In addition, ATP synthesis was barely decreased. Therefore, GUG is a functional initiation codon for the human ATP6 gene.
...
PMID:GUG is an efficient initiation codon to translate the human mitochondrial ATP6 gene. 1469 45

The F(o)F(1)-ATPase, a multisubunit protein complex of the inner mitochondrial membrane, produces most of the ATP in mammalian cells. Mitochondrial diseases as a result of a dysfunction of ATPase can be caused by mutations in mitochondrial DNA-encoded ATPase subunit a or rarely by an ATPase defect of nuclear origin. Here we present a detailed functional and immunochemical analysis of a new case of selective and generalized ATPase deficiency found in an Austrian patient. The defect manifested with developmental delay, muscle hypotonia, failure to thrive, ptosis, and varying lactic acidemia (up to 12 mmol/L) beginning from the neonatal period. A low-degree dilated cardiomyopathy of the left ventricle developed between the age of 1 and 2 y. A >90% decrease in oligomycin-sensitive ATPase activity and an 86% decrease in the content of the ATPase complex was found in muscle mitochondria. It was associated with a significant decrease of ADP-stimulated respiration of succinate (1.5-fold) and respiratory control with ADP (1.7-fold) in permeabilized muscle fibers, and with a slight decrease of the respiratory chain complex I and compensatory increase in the content of complexes III and IV. The same ATPase deficiency without an increase in respiratory chain complexes was found in fibroblasts, suggesting a generalized defect with tissue-specific manifestation. Absence of any mutations in mitochondrial ATP6 and ATP8 genes indicates a nuclear origin of the defect.
...
PMID:Reduced respiratory control with ADP and changed pattern of respiratory chain enzymes as a result of selective deficiency of the mitochondrial ATP synthase. 1515 67

Dysfunction of mitochondrial ATPase (F1F(o)-ATP synthase) due to missense mutations in ATP6 [mtDNA (mitochondrial DNA)-encoded subunit a] is a frequent cause of severe mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. We have investigated a rare mtDNA mutation, i.e. a 2 bp deletion of TA at positions 9205 and 9206 (9205DeltaTA), which affects the STOP codon of the ATP6 gene and the cleavage site between the RNAs for ATP6 and COX3 (cytochrome c oxidase 3). The mutation was present at increasing load in a three-generation family (in blood: 16%/82%/>98%). In the affected boy with severe encephalopathy, a homoplasmic mutation was present in blood, fibroblasts and muscle. The fibroblasts from the patient showed normal aurovertin-sensitive ATPase hydrolytic activity, a 70% decrease in ATP synthesis and an 85% decrease in COX activity. ADP-stimulated respiration and the ADP-induced decrease in the mitochondrial membrane potential at state 4 were decreased by 50%. The content of subunit a was decreased 10-fold compared with other ATPase subunits, and [35S]-methionine labelling showed a 9-fold decrease in subunit a biosynthesis. The content of COX subunits 1, 4 and 6c was decreased by 30-60%. Northern Blot and quantitative real-time reverse transcription-PCR analysis further demonstrated that the primary ATP6--COX3 transcript is cleaved to the ATP6 and COX3 mRNAs 2-3-fold less efficiently. Structural studies by Blue-Native and two-dimensional electrophoresis revealed an altered pattern of COX assembly and instability of the ATPase complex, which dissociated into subcomplexes. The results indicate that the 9205DeltaTA mutation prevents the synthesis of ATPase subunit a, and causes the formation of incomplete ATPase complexes that are capable of ATP hydrolysis but not ATP synthesis. The mutation also affects the biogenesis of COX, which is present in a decreased amount in cells from affected individuals.
...
PMID:Diminished synthesis of subunit a (ATP6) and altered function of ATP synthase and cytochrome c oxidase due to the mtDNA 2 bp microdeletion of TA at positions 9205 and 9206. 1526 3

Dysfunctions of the F(1)F(o)-ATPase complex cause severe mitochondrial diseases affecting primarily the paediatric population. While in the maternally inherited ATPase defects due to mtDNA mutations in the ATP6 gene the enzyme is structurally and functionally modified, in ATPase defects of nuclear origin mitochondria contain a decreased amount of otherwise normal enzyme. In this case biosynthesis of ATPase is down-regulated due to a block at the early stage of enzyme assembly-formation of the F(1) catalytic part. The pathogenetic mechanism implicates dysfunction of Atp12 or other F(1)-specific assembly factors. For cellular energetics, however, the negative consequences may be quite similar irrespective of whether the ATPase dysfunction is of mitochondrial or nuclear origin.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial diseases and ATPase defects of nuclear origin. 1528 82

Mutations in the ATP6 gene of mtDNA (mitochondrial DNA) have been shown to cause several different neurological disorders. The product of this gene is ATPase 6, an essential component of the F1F0-ATPase. In the present study we show that the function of the F1F0-ATPase is impaired in lymphocytes from ten individuals harbouring the mtDNA T8993G point mutation associated with NARP (neuropathy, ataxia and retinitis pigmentosa) and Leigh syndrome. We show that the impaired function of both the ATP synthase and the proton transport activity of the enzyme correlates with the amount of the mtDNA that is mutated, ranging from 13-94%. The fluorescent dye RH-123 (Rhodamine-123) was used as a probe to determine whether or not passive proton flux (i.e. from the intermembrane space to the matrix) is affected by the mutation. Under state 3 respiratory conditions, a slight difference in RH-123 fluorescence quenching kinetics was observed between mutant and control mitochondria that suggests a marginally lower F0 proton flux capacity in cells from patients. Moreover, independent of the cellular mutant load the specific inhibitor oligomycin induced a marked enhancement of the RH-123 quenching rate, which is associated with a block in proton conductivity through F0 [Linnett and Beechey (1979) Inhibitors of the ATP synthethase system. Methods Enzymol. 55, 472-518]. Overall, the results rule out the previously proposed proton block as the basis of the pathogenicity of the mtDNA T8993G mutation. Since the ATP synthesis rate was decreased by 70% in NARP patients compared with controls, we suggest that the T8993G mutation affects the coupling between proton translocation through F0 and ATP synthesis on F1. We discuss our findings in view of the current knowledge regarding the rotary mechanism of catalysis of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Inefficient coupling between proton transport and ATP synthesis may be the pathogenic mechanism for NARP and Leigh syndrome resulting from the T8993G mutation in mtDNA. 1640 16

As previously established in yeast, two sequences within mRNAs are responsible for their specific localization to the mitochondrial surface-the region coding for the mitochondrial targeting sequence and the 3'UTR. This phenomenon is conserved in human cells. Therefore, we decided to use mRNA localization as a tool to address to mitochondria, a protein that is not normally imported. For this purpose, we associated a nuclear recoded ATP6 gene with the mitochondrial targeting sequence and the 3'UTR of the nuclear SOD2 gene, which mRNA exclusively localizes to the mitochondrial surface in HeLa cells. The ATP6 gene is naturally located into the organelle and encodes a highly hydrophobic protein of the respiratory chain complex V. In this study, we demonstrated that hybrid ATP6 mRNAs, as the endogenous SOD2 mRNA, localize to the mitochondrial surface in human cells. Remarkably, fusion proteins localize to mitochondria in vivo. Indeed, ATP6 precursors synthesized in the cytoplasm were imported into mitochondria in a highly efficient way, especially when both the MTS and the 3'UTR of the SOD2 gene were associated with the re-engineered ATP6 gene. Hence, these data indicate that mRNA targeting to the mitochondrial surface represents an attractive strategy for allowing the mitochondrial import of proteins originally encoded by the mitochondrial genome without any amino acid change in the protein that could interfere with its biologic activity.
...
PMID:mRNA localization to the mitochondrial surface allows the efficient translocation inside the organelle of a nuclear recoded ATP6 protein. 1675 14

A T-to-C missense mutation at nucleotide position 9,185 in the protein-coding ATP6 gene of the mitochondrial genome was present at high heteroplasmy in members of a Canadian family with Leigh syndrome with predominant ataxia and peripheral neuropathy. This mutation results in the substitution of a proline residue for an evolutionary-conserved leucine at position of amino acid 220 near the carboxyl terminus of the mitochondrial protein. The index patient and brother, who had an identical clinical presentation, had >90% mutant mtDNA in cultured skin fibroblasts, lymphocytes, and whole blood. Their mother and a maternal uncle, symptomatic with a peripheral neuropathy alone, had 86% and 85% heteroplasmy, respectively. Symptomatic maternal cousins with early onset revealed 90% and 91% mutant mtDNA in all tissues analyzed. Studies of lymphoblasts from the asymptomatic maternal grandmother and eldest brother of the proband were heteroplasmic for mutant mtDNA with 56% and 17%, respectively. Biochemical analysis demonstrated normal respiratory chain enzyme activity in muscle and fibroblasts, normal ATP synthesis, but reduced oligomycin-sensitive H(+)ATPase in cultured lymphoblast mitochondria. We propose that the 9,185T > C mtDNA mutation is pathogenic even though the initial phenotype is mild and the biochemical phenotype not easily detectable.
...
PMID:Late onset Leigh syndrome and ataxia due to a T to C mutation at bp 9,185 of mitochondrial DNA. 1735 90


1 2 3 4 Next >>