“…The majority of mitochondria from tric1tric2 had cristae observable only at the periphery (45 of 64) and 11% of mitochondria had no observable cristae at all, while in Col-0, all mitochondria showed well-developed cristae crossing the entire organelle (Supplemental Table S1). The profound morphological changes, such as fewer cristae junctions and an enlarged swollen mitochondrion, had been observed previously in a variety of mutants in various species, commonly in mutants of transcription and translation components that display altered mitochondrial translation rates (Arbustini et al, 1998;Zick et al, 2009;Guitart et al, 2013). Vice versa, mutants to components involved in maintaining mitochondrial morphology, such as OpaI (an inner membrane protein involved in mitochondrial cristae formation), which are characterized by disorganized mitochondria with rounded cristae, interestingly exhibit increased mitochondrial translation levels (Cogliati et al, 2013).…”