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1.
Friedreich's ataxia is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by mutations in the frataxin gene that produces a predominantly mitochondrial protein whose primary function appears to be mitochondrial iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) biosynthesis. Previously we demonstrated that frataxin interacts with multiple components of the mammalian ISC assembly machinery. Here we demonstrate that frataxin interacts with the mammalian mitochondrial chaperone HSC20. We show that this interaction is iron-dependent. We also show that like frataxin, HSC20 interacts with multiple proteins involved in ISC biogenesis including the ISCU/Nfs1 ISC biogenesis complex and the GRP75 ISC chaperone. Furthermore, knockdown of HSC20 caused functional defects in activity of mitochondrial ISC-containing enzymes and also defects in ISC protein expression. Alterations up or down of frataxin expression caused compensatory changes in HSC20 expression inversely, as expected of two cooperating proteins operating in the same pathway and suggesting a potential therapeutic strategy for the disease. Knockdown of HSC20 altered cytosolic and mitochondrial iron pools and increased the expression of transferrin receptor 1 and iron regulatory protein 2 consistent with decreased iron bioavailability. These results indicate that HSC20 interacts with frataxin structurally and functionally and is important for ISC biogenesis and iron homeostasis in mammals. Furthermore, they suggest that HSC20 may act late in the ISC pathway as a chaperone in ISC delivery to apoproteins and that HSC20 should be included in multi-protein complex studies of mammalian ISC biogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) results from a generalized deficiency of mitochondrial and cytosolic iron-sulfur protein activity initially ascribed to mitochondrial iron overload. Recent in vitro data suggest that frataxin is necessary for iron incorporation in Fe-S cluster (ISC) and heme biosynthesis. In addition, several reports suggest that continuous oxidative damage resulting from hampered superoxide dismutases (SODs) signaling participates in the mitochondrial deficiency and ultimately the neuronal and cardiac cell death. This has led to the use of antioxidants such as idebenone for FRDA therapy. To further discern the role of oxidative stress in FRDA pathophysiology, we have tested the potential effect of increased antioxidant defense using an MnSOD mimetic (MnTBAP) and Cu,ZnSOD overexpression on the murine FRDA cardiomyopathy. Surprisingly, no positive effect was observed, suggesting that increased superoxide production could not explain by itself the FRDA cardiac pathophysiology. Moreover, we demonstrate that complete frataxin-deficiency neither induces oxidative stress in neuronal tissues nor alters the MnSOD expression and induction in the early step of the pathology (neuronal and cardiac) as previously suggested. We show that cytosolic ISC aconitase activity of iron regulatory protein-1 progressively decreases, whereas its apo-RNA binding form increases despite the absence of oxidative stress, suggesting that in a mammalian system the mitochondrial ISC assembly machinery is essential for cytosolic ISC biogenesis. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that in FRDA, mitochondrial iron accumulation does not induce oxidative stress and we propose that, contrary to the general assumption, FRDA is a neurodegenerative disease not associated with oxidative damage.  相似文献   

3.
Friedreich ataxia is a severe autosomal-recessive disease characterized by neurodegeneration, cardiomyopathy and diabetes, resulting from reduced synthesis of the mitochondrial protein frataxin. Although frataxin is ubiquitously expressed, frataxin deficiency leads to a selective loss of dorsal root ganglia neurons, cardiomyocytes and pancreatic beta cells. How frataxin normally promotes survival of these particular cells is the subject of intense debate. The predominant view is that frataxin sustains mitochondrial energy production and other cellular functions by providing iron for heme synthesis and iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) assembly and repair. We have proposed that frataxin not only promotes the biogenesis of iron-containing enzymes, but also detoxifies surplus iron thereby affording a critical anti-oxidant mechanism. These two functions have been difficult to tease apart, however, and the physiologic role of iron detoxification by frataxin has not yet been demonstrated in vivo. Here, we describe mutations that specifically impair the ferroxidation or mineralization activity of yeast frataxin, which are necessary for iron detoxification but do not affect the iron chaperone function of the protein. These mutations increase the sensitivity of yeast cells to oxidative stress, shortening chronological life span and precluding survival in the absence of the anti-oxidant enzyme superoxide dismutase. Thus, the role of frataxin is not limited to promoting ISC assembly or heme synthesis. Iron detoxification is another function of frataxin relevant to anti-oxidant defense and cell longevity that could play a critical role in the metabolically demanding environment of non-dividing neuronal, cardiac and pancreatic beta cells.  相似文献   

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6.
The maturation of iron-sulfur (Fe/S) proteins in eukaryotes has been intensively studied in yeast. Hardly anything is known so far about the process in higher eukaryotes, even though the high conservation of the yeast maturation components in most Eukarya suggests similar mechanisms. Here, we developed a cell culture model in which the RNA interference (RNAi) technology was used to deplete a potential component of Fe/S protein maturation, frataxin, in human HeLa cells. This protein is lowered in humans with the neuromuscular disorder Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA). Upon frataxin depletion by RNAi, the enzyme activities of the mitochondrial Fe/S proteins, aconitase and succinate dehydrogenase, were decreased, while the activities of non-Fe/S proteins remained constant. Moreover, Fe/S cluster association with the cytosolic iron-regulatory protein 1 was diminished. In contrast, no alterations in cellular iron uptake, iron content and heme formation were found, and no mitochondrial iron deposits were observed upon frataxin depletion. Hence, iron accumulation in FRDA mitochondria appears to be a late consequence of frataxin deficiency. These results demonstrate (i) that frataxin is a component of the human Fe/S cluster assembly machinery and (ii) that it plays a role in the maturation of both mitochondrial and cytosolic Fe/S proteins.  相似文献   

7.
The mitochondrial protein frataxin prevents nuclear damage   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The mitochondrial protein frataxin helps maintain appropriate iron levels in the mitochondria of yeast and humans. A deficiency of this protein in humans causes Friedreich's ataxia, while its complete absence in yeast (Delta yfh1 mutant) results in loss of mitochondrial DNA, apparently due to radicals generated by excess iron. We found that the absence of frataxin in yeast also leads to nuclear damage, as evidenced by inducibility of a nuclear DNA damage reporter, increased chromosomal instability including recombination and mutation, and greater sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents, as well as slow growth. Addition of a human frataxin mutant did not prevent nuclear damage, although it partially complemented the Delta yfh1 mutant in preventing mitochondrial DNA loss. The effects in Delta yfh1 mutants result from reactive oxygen species (ROS), since (i) Delta yfh1 cells produce more hydrogen peroxide, (ii) the effects are alleviated by a radical scavenger and (iii) the glutathione peroxidase gene prevents an increase in mutation rates. Thus, the frataxin protein is concluded to have a protective role for the nucleus as well as the mitochondria.  相似文献   

8.
The neurodegenerative disorder Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is caused by mutations in frataxin, a mitochondrial protein whose function remains controversial. Using co-immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry we identified multiple interactors of mitochondrial frataxin in mammalian cells. One interactor was mortalin/GRP75, a homolog of the yeast ssq1 chaperone that integrates iron-sulfur clusters into imported mitochondrial proteins. Another interactor was ISD11, recently identified as a component of the eukaryotic complex Nfs1/ISCU, an essential component of iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis. Interactions between frataxin and ISD11, and frataxin and GRP75 were confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation experiments in both directions. Immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated that ISD11 co-localized with both frataxin and with mitochondria. The point mutations I154F and W155R in frataxin cause FRDA and are clustered to one surface of the protein, and these mutations decrease the interaction of frataxin with ISD11. The frataxin/ISD11 interaction was also decreased by the chelator EDTA, and was increased by supplementation with nickel but not other metal ions. Nickel supplementation rescued the defective interaction of mutant frataxin I154F and W155R with ISD11. Upon ISD11 depletion by siRNA in HEK293T cells, the amount of the Nfs1/ISCU protein complex declined, as did the activity of the iron-sulfur cluster enzyme aconitase, while the cellular iron content was increased, as seen in tissues from FRDA patients. Furthermore, ISD11 mRNA levels were decreased in FRDA patient cells. These data suggest that frataxin binds the iron-sulfur biogenesis Nfs1/ISCU complex through ISD11, that the interaction is nickel-dependent, and that multiple consequences of frataxin deficiency are duplicated by ISD11 deficiency.  相似文献   

9.
Friedreich’s ataxia is a cardio- and neurodegenerative disease due to decreased expression of the mitochondrial protein, frataxin. This defect results in mitochondrial iron-overload, and in this review, we discuss the mechanisms that lead to this iron accumulation. Using a conditional knockout mouse model where frataxin is deleted in the heart, it has been shown that this mutation leads to transferrin receptor-1 upregulation, resulting in increased iron uptake from transferrin. There is also marked downregulation of ferritin that is required for iron storage and decreased expression of the iron exporter, ferroportin1, leading to decreased cellular iron efflux. The increased mitochondrial iron uptake is facilitated by upregulation of the mitochondrial iron transporter, mitoferrin2. This stimulation of iron uptake probably attempts to rescue the deficit in mitochondrial iron metabolism that is due to downregulation of mitochondrial iron utilization, namely, heme and iron–sulfur cluster (ISC) synthesis and also iron storage (mitochondrial ferritin). The resultant decrease in heme and ISC synthesis means heme and ISCs are not exiting the mitochondrion for cytosolic use. Hence, increased mitochondrial iron uptake coupled with decreased utilization and release leads to mitochondrial iron-loading. More generally, disturbance of mitochondrial iron utilization in other diseases probably also results in similar compensatory alterations.  相似文献   

10.
The mitochondrial protein frataxin (FXN) is known to be involved in mitochondrial iron homeostasis and iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis. It is discussed to modulate function of the electron transport chain and production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). FXN loss in neurons and heart muscle cells causes an autosomal-dominant mitochondrial disorder, Friedreich's ataxia. Recently, tumor induction after targeted FXN deletion in liver and reversal of the tumorigenic phenotype of colonic carcinoma cells following FXN overexpression were described in the literature, suggesting a tumor suppressor function. We hypothesized that a partial reversal of the malignant phenotype of glioma cells should occur after FXN transfection, if the mitochondrial protein has tumor suppressor functions in these brain tumors. In astrocytic brain tumors and tumor cell lines, we observed reduced FXN levels compared with non-neoplastic astrocytes. Mitochondrial content (citrate synthase activity) was not significantly altered in U87MG glioblastoma cells stably overexpressing FXN (U87-FXN). Surprisingly, U87-FXN cells exhibited increased cytoplasmic ROS levels, although mitochondrial ROS release was attenuated by FXN, as expected. Higher cytoplasmic ROS levels corresponded to reduced activities of glutathione peroxidase and catalase, and lower glutathione content. The defect of antioxidative capacity resulted in increased susceptibility of U87-FXN cells against oxidative stress induced by H(2)O(2) or buthionine sulfoximine. These characteristics may explain a higher sensitivity toward staurosporine and alkylating drugs, at least in part. On the other hand, U87-FXN cells exhibited enhanced growth rates in vitro under growth factor-restricted and hypoxic conditions and in vivo using tumor xenografts in nude mice. These data contrast to a general tumor suppressor function of FXN but suggest a dual, pro-proliferative but chemosensitizing role in astrocytic tumors.  相似文献   

11.
Recent advances in the molecular pathogenesis of Friedreich ataxia   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Friedreich ataxia, the most frequent cause of recessive ataxia, is due in most cases to a homozygous intronic expansion resulting in the loss of function of frataxin. Frataxin is a mitochondrial protein conserved through evolution. Yeast knock-out models and histological data from patient heart autopsies have shown that frataxin defect causes mitochondrial iron accumulation. Biochemical data from patient heart biopsies or autopsies have revealed a specific deficiency in the activities of aconitases and of mitochondrial iron-sulfur proteins. These results suggest that frataxin may play a role either in mitochondrial iron transport or in iron-sulfur cluster assembly or transport. Iron abnormalities suggest a pathogenic mechanism involving free radical production and oxidative stress, a process that might be sensitive to antioxidant therapies.  相似文献   

12.
Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive degenerative disease caused by a deficiency of frataxin, a conserved mitochondrial protein of unknown function. Mitochondrial iron accumulation, loss of iron-sulfur cluster-containing enzymes and increased oxidative damage occur in yeast and mouse frataxin-depleted mutants as well as tissues and cell lines from FRDA patients, suggesting that frataxin may be involved in export of iron from the mitochondria, synthesis of iron-sulfur clusters and/or protection from oxidative damage. We have previously shown that yeast frataxin has structural and functional features of an iron storage protein. In this study we have investigated the function of human frataxin in Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. When expressed in E.coli, the mature form of human frataxin assembles into a stable homopolymer that can bind approximately 10 atoms of iron per molecule of frataxin. The iron-loaded homopolymer can be detected on non-denaturing gels by either protein or iron staining demonstrating a stable association between frataxin and iron. As analyzed by gel filtration and electron microscopy, the homopolymer consists of globular particles of approximately 1 MDa and ordered rod-shaped polymers of these particles that accumulate small electron-dense cores. When the human frataxin precursor is expressed in S.cerevisiae, the mitochondrially generated mature form is separated by gel filtration into monomer and a high molecular weight pool of >600 kDa. A high molecular weight pool of frataxin is also present in mouse heart indicating that frataxin can assemble under native conditions. In radiolabeled yeast cells, human frataxin is recovered by immunoprecipitation with approximately five atoms of (55)Fe bound per molecule. These findings suggest that FRDA results from decreased mitochondrial iron storage due to frataxin deficiency which may impair iron metabolism, promote oxidative damage and lead to progressive iron accumulation.  相似文献   

13.
The mitochondrial matrix protein frataxin is depleted in patients with Friedreich's ataxia, the most common autosomal recessive ataxia. While frataxin is important for intracellular iron homeostasis, its exact cellular role is unknown. Deletion of the yeast frataxin homolog YFH1 yields mutants ((Delta)yfh1) that, depending on the genetic background, display various degrees of phenotypic defects. This renders it difficult to distinguish primary (early) from secondary (late) consequences of Yfh1p deficiency. We have constructed a yeast strain (Gal-YFH1) that carries the YFH1 gene under the control of a galactose-regulated promoter. Yfh1p-deficient Gal-YFH1 cells are far less sensitive to oxidative stress than (Delta)yfh1 mutants, maintain mitochondrial DNA, and synthesize heme at wild-type rates. Yfh1p depletion causes a strong reduction in the assembly of mitochondrial Fe/S proteins both in vivo and in detergent extracts of mitochondria. Impaired Fe/S protein biogenesis explains the respiratory deficiency of Gal-YFH1 cells. Furthermore, Yfh1p-depleted Gal-YFH1 cells show decreased maturation of cytosolic Fe/S proteins and accumulation of mitochondrial iron. This latter phenotype is common for defects in cytosolic Fe/S protein assembly. Together, our data demonstrate a specific role of frataxin in the biosynthesis of cellular Fe/S proteins and exclude most of the previously suggested functions. Friedreich's ataxia may therefore represent a disorder caused by defects in Fe/S protein maturation.  相似文献   

14.
We have disrupted expression of the mitochondrial Friedreich ataxia protein frataxin specifically in murine hepatocytes to generate mice with impaired mitochondrial function and decreased oxidative phosphorylation. These animals have a reduced life span and develop multiple hepatic tumors. Livers also show increased oxidative stress, impaired respiration and reduced ATP levels paralleled by reduced activity of iron-sulfur cluster (Fe/S) containing proteins (ISP), which all leads to increased hepatocyte turnover by promoting both apoptosis and proliferation. Accordingly, phosphorylation of the stress-inducible p38 MAP kinase was found to be specifically impaired following disruption of frataxin. Taken together, these findings indicate that frataxin may act as a mitochondrial tumor suppressor protein in mammals.  相似文献   

15.
Aging of post-mitotic cells, the conidia, of Neurospora crassa is defined as the time-dependent loss of viability under a constant laboratory environment which probably resembles the organism's tropical habitat; namely, at 30 degrees C, 85-100% relative humidity under white light. Median lifespan is defined as the age at which survival of a conidial population has declined to 50% of that of a fully viable population at birth. A collection of short (age-) and long-lived (age+) mutants were previously selected from the wild-type whose median lifespan is 22 days. Thus, five groups of strains with distinct lifespans of 7, 22, 36, 50 and 60 days were defined. The purposes of the present investigation were to determine if the activities of anti-oxygenic enzymes are correlated with lifespan and to elucidate the function of the cellular longevity determinant genes. The activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), and glutathione peroxidase (GPX) were highly-correlated with lifespan; whereas glutathione reductase and non-specific peroxidase activities were not correlated. The short-lived mutants were also deficient in cytochrome c peroxidase (CPX) and ascorbate free radical reductase (AFR), but not deficient in dehydroascorbate reductase. (These latter three enzymes were not examined in age+ mutants.) By isoelectric focusing analysis, the deficiencies of SOD, CAT, and GPX activities of age- mutants were defined in terms of specific isozymes. The mutants were specifically deficient in a cyanide-resistant mitochondrial isozyme of SOD. Sixteen age- genes, called the age-1 complex, were previously mapped on one arm of the seven chromosomes. On the basis of mapping and complementation data, it was inferred that the genes are spatially and functionally redundant. The hypothesis of functional redundancy is also supported by the enzyme data. Of seven mutants examined, representing seven of the age- genes, all were deficient in SOD, CAT and CPX, and six were deficient in AFR. Of four mutants examined, representing four of the genes, all were deficient in GPX. The results indicate a molecular basis for the previously observed photosensitivity of the mutants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Mitochondrial ferritin (MtF) is structurally and functionally similar to the cytosolic ferritins, molecules designed to store and detoxify cellular iron. MtF expression in human and mouse is restricted to the testis and few tissues, and it is abundant in the erythroblasts of patients with sideroblastic anemia, where it is thought to protect the mitochondria from the damage caused by iron loading. Mitochondria iron overload occurs also in cells deficient in frataxin, a mitochondrial protein involved in iron handling and implicated in Friedreich ataxia. We expressed human MtF in frataxin-deficient yeast cells, a well-characterized model of mitochondrial iron overload and oxidative damage. The human MtF precursor was efficiently imported by yeast mitochondria and processed to functional ferritin that actively sequestered iron in the organelle. MtF expression rescued the respiratory deficiency caused by the loss of frataxin protecting the activity of iron-sulfur enzymes and enabling frataxin-deficient cells to grow on non-fermentable carbon sources. Furthermore, MtF expression prevented the development of mitochondrial iron overload, preserved mitochondrial DNA integrity and increased cell resistance to H2O2. The data show that MtF can substitute for most frataxin functions in yeast, suggesting that frataxin is directly involved in mitochondrial iron-binding and detoxification.  相似文献   

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18.
A non-essential function for yeast frataxin in iron-sulfur cluster assembly   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Friedreich's ataxia is caused by a deficit in frataxin, a small mitochondrial protein of unknown function that has been conserved during evolution. Previous studies have pointed out a role for frataxin in mitochondrial iron-sulfur (Fe-S) metabolism. Here, we have analyzed the incorporation of Fe-S clusters into yeast ferredoxin imported into isolated energized mitochondria from cells grown in the presence of glycerol, an obligatory respiratory carbon source. Similar amounts of apo-ferredoxin precursor were imported into mitochondria and processed in wild-type and yfh1-deleted (delta YF111) strains. However, the incorporation of Fe-S clusters into apo-ferredoxin was significantly reduced in delta YFH1 mitochondria. The newly assembled ferredoxin was stable, excluding the possibility that the decreased incorporation was a result of increased oxidative damage. When delta YFH1 cells were grown in raffinose medium, the formation of holo-ferredoxin was low, as a consequence of the decrease in ferredoxin precursor import into mitochondria. However, the decrease in the conversion rate of apo- into holo-ferredoxin was in the same range as for glycerol-grown cells, indicating that the extent of the defect in Fe-S protein assembly is similar under different physiological conditions. These data show that frataxin is not essential for Fe-S protein assembly, but improves the efficiency of the process. The large variations observed in the activity of Fe-S cluster proteins under different physiological conditions result from secondary defects in the physiology of delta YFH1 cells.  相似文献   

19.
The previous observation (Eur. J. Biochem., 82 (1978) 563--567) that age-dependent accumulation of lipid peroxides follows as a consequence of increased radical formation in mitochondria has prompted an examination of the response of a set of protective enzymes to the above situation. Levels of mitochondrial catalase activity as well as selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase activity were found to be increased with age, while superoxide dismutase activity remained unchanged. No selenium-independent glutathione peroxidase activity could be detected either in preparations from young 3-month-old controls or in preparations from 2-year-old rats. Both the relatively high and unchanged levels of reduced glutathione and kinetic considerations suggest that glutathione peroxidase is preferentially involved in lipid peroxide metabolism, while catalase predominantly metabolizes mitochondrial H2O2.  相似文献   

20.
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