Mitochondrial calcium is an important modulator of cellular metabolism. CCDC90A was reported to be a regulator of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) complex, a selective channel that controls mitochondrial calcium uptake, and hence was renamed MCUR1. Here we show that suppression of CCDC90A in human fibroblasts produces a specific cytochrome c oxidase (COX) assembly defect, resulting in decreased mitochondrial membrane potential and reduced mitochondrial calcium uptake capacity. Fibroblasts from patients with COX assembly defects due to mutations in TACO1 or COX10 also showed reduced mitochondrial membrane potential and impaired calcium uptake capacity, both of which were rescued by expression of the respective wild-type cDNAs. Deletion of fmp32, a homolog of CCDC90A in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, an organism that lacks an MCU, also produces a COX deficiency, demonstrating that the function of CCDC90A is evolutionarily conserved. We conclude that CCDC90A plays a role in COX assembly and does not directly regulate MCU.
Eukaryotic cells employ the ribosome-associated quality control complex (RQC) to maintain homeostasis despite defects that cause ribosomes to stall. The RQC comprises the E3 ubiquitin ligase Ltn1p, the ATPase Cdc48p, Rqc1p, and Rqc2p. Upon ribosome stalling and splitting, the RQC assembles on the 60S species containing unreleased peptidyl-tRNA (60S:peptidyl–tRNA). Ltn1p and Rqc1p facilitate ubiquitination of the incomplete nascent chain, marking it for degradation. Rqc2p stabilizes Ltn1p on the 60S and recruits charged tRNAs to the 60S to catalyze elongation of the nascent protein with carboxy-terminal alanine and threonine extensions (CAT tails). By mobilizing the nascent chain, CAT tailing can expose lysine residues that are hidden in the exit tunnel, thereby supporting efficient ubiquitination. If the ubiquitin–proteasome system is overwhelmed or unavailable, CAT-tailed nascent chains can aggregate in the cytosol or within organelles like mitochondria. Here we identify Vms1p as a tRNA hydrolase that releases stalled polypeptides engaged by the RQC.
LONP1, an AAA+ mitochondrial protease, is implicated in protein quality control, but its precise role in this process remains poorly understood. In this study, we have investigated the role of human LONP1 in mitochondrial proteostasis and gene expression. Depletion of LONP1 resulted in partial loss of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and a complete suppression of mitochondrial translation associated with impaired ribosome biogenesis. The levels of a distinct subset of mitochondrial matrix proteins (SSBP1, MTERFD3, FASTKD2, and CLPX) increased in the presence of a catalytically dead form of LONP1, suggesting that they are bona fide LONP1 substrates. Unexpectedly, the unprocessed forms of the same proteins also accumulated in an insoluble protein fraction. This subset of unprocessed matrix proteins (but not their mature forms) accumulated following depletion of the mitochondrial processing peptidase MPP, though all other MPP substrates investigated were processed normally. Prolonged depletion of LONP1 produced massive matrix protein aggregates, robustly activated the integrated stress response (ISR) pathway, and resulted in stabilization of PINK1, a mitophagy marker. These results demonstrate that LONP1 and MPPαβ are together required for the maturation of a subset of LONP1 client proteins and that LONP1 activity is essential for the maintenance of mitochondrial proteostasis and gene expression.
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