11 research outputs found

    Doctor of Philosophy

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    dissertationMitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation is an efficient source of cellular energy. This pathway couples the oxidation of NADH and FADH2 to the establishment of an electrochemical gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane to facilitate ATP generation. The respiratory chain is comprised of five complexes; however, these are not simple enzymes. Rather, they are highly intricate membrane-bound complexes. As such, the biogenesis of these complexes presents the cell with numerous problems. Thus, the cell expresses dozens of assembly factors that are required to support the biogenesis of individual complexes. In the end, this promotes cellular energy production and protects the cell from potentially damaging insults. Succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) or complex II is a member of the electron transport chain (ETC) and TCA cycle. It plays a central role in cellular energy generation and mutations in the genes encoding SDH subunits and assembly factors are associated with human disease, including cancer and neurodegeneration. This highly conserved family supports the maturation of SDHA/Sdh1, the catalytic subunit of SDH. As such, Sdh8 functions as an Sdh1-specific chaperone and prevents the spurious generation of reactive oxygen species during the assembly process. In Drosophila, Sdhaf4 is required to prevent neurodegeneration and maintain normal motility. In the end, this work has expanded our understanding of the SDH assembly pathway and provided novel insights into the development of SDH-deficient pathologies. In addition to the canonical cytosolic pathway, eukaryotic cells have maintained a mitochondrial fatty acid synthesis pathway (FASII). This pathway is homologous to prokaryotic fatty acid synthesis and utilizes a number of enzymes that interact transiently with the acyl carrier protein (ACP) to support elongation of nascent acyl chains. Herein, we describe a novel and unexpected role for ACP and FASII in the assembly and activation of the ETC. As such, FASII-dependent synthesis of ACP-bound acyl chains activates a network of complex-specific assembly factors to support the assembly of the ETC complexes and synthesis of their essential cofactors. In the end, FASII and ACP couple mitochondrial acetyl-CoA to ETC biogenesis

    Structure of human Fe–S assembly subcomplex reveals unexpected cysteine desulfurase architecture and acyl-ACP–ISD11 interactions

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    In eukaryotes, sulfur is mobilized for incorporation into multiple biosynthetic pathways by a cysteine desulfurase complex that consists of a catalytic subunit (NFS1), LYR protein (ISD11), and acyl carrier protein (ACP). This NFS1-ISD11-ACP (SDA) complex forms the core of the iron-sulfur (Fe-S) assembly complex and associates with assembly proteins ISCU2, frataxin (FXN), and ferredoxin to synthesize Fe-S clusters. Here we present crystallographic and electron microscopic structures of the SDA complex coupled to enzyme kinetic and cell-based studies to provide structure-function properties of a mitochondrial cysteine desulfurase. Unlike prokaryotic cysteine desulfurases, the SDA structure adopts an unexpected architecture in which a pair of ISD11 subunits form the dimeric core of the SDA complex, which clarifies the critical role of ISD11 in eukaryotic assemblies. The different quaternary structure results in an incompletely formed substrate channel and solvent-exposed pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor and provides a rationale for the allosteric activator function of FXN in eukaryotic systems. The structure also reveals the 4'-phosphopantetheine-conjugated acyl-group of ACP occupies the hydrophobic core of ISD11, explaining the basis of ACP stabilization. The unexpected architecture for the SDA complex provides a framework for understanding interactions with acceptor proteins for sulfur-containing biosynthetic pathways, elucidating mechanistic details of eukaryotic F e-S cluster biosynthesis, and clarifying how defects in Fe-S cluster assembly lead to diseases such as Friedreich's ataxia. Moreover, our results support a lock-and-key model in which LYR proteins associate with acyl-ACP as a mechanism for fatty acid biosynthesis to coordinate the expression, Fe-S cofactor maturation, and activity of the respiratory complexes. Keywords: LYR; ACP; iron-sulfur cluster; PLP; frataxi

    Vms1p is a release factor for the ribosome-associated quality control complex.

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    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

    A combined computational and structural model of the full-length human prolactin receptor

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    The prolactin receptor is an archetype member of the class I cytokine receptor family, comprising receptors with fundamental functions in biology as well as key drug targets. Structurally, each of these receptors represent an intriguing diversity, providing an exceptionally challenging target for structural biology. Here, we access the molecular architecture of the monomeric human prolactin receptor by combining experimental and computational efforts. We solve the NMR structure of its transmembrane domain in micelles and collect structural data on overlapping fragments of the receptor with small-angle X-ray scattering, native mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy. Along with previously published data, these are integrated by molecular modelling to generate a full receptor structure. The result provides the first full view of a class I cytokine receptor, exemplifying the architecture of more than 40 different receptor chains, and reveals that the extracellular domain is merely the tip of a molecular iceberg
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