Cell Metabolism
Volume 15, Issue 3, 7 March 2012, Pages 324-335
Journal home page for Cell Metabolism

Article
Mitochondrial Complex I Plays an Essential Role in Human Respirasome Assembly

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2012.01.015Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Summary

The biogenesis and function of the mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) involve the organization of RC enzyme complexes in supercomplexes or respirasomes through an unknown biosynthetic process. This leads to structural interdependences between RC complexes, which are highly relevant from biological and biomedical perspectives, because RC defects often lead to severe neuromuscular disorders. We show that in human cells, respirasome biogenesis involves a complex I assembly intermediate acting as a scaffold for the combined incorporation of complexes III and IV subunits, rather than originating from the association of preassembled individual holoenzymes. The process ends with the incorporation of complex I NADH dehydrogenase catalytic module, which leads to the respirasome activation. While complexes III and IV assemble either as free holoenzymes or by incorporation of free subunits into supercomplexes, the respirasomes constitute the structural units where complex I is assembled and activated, thus explaining the significance of the respirasomes for RC function.

Highlights

► Mitochondrial respirasome biogenesis is a multistep biosynthetic process ► It does not require the associations of independent preassembled RC complexes ► A CI intermediate acts as a scaffold for the incorporation of free CIII+CIV subunits ► Respirasomes are the structural units in which CI is fully assembled and activated

Cited by (0)