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Eukaryotic Cell, September 2006, p. 1460-1467, Vol. 5, No. 9
1535-9778/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.00118-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Biochemistry and Photobiology Laboratory, Department of Life Sciences, Université de Liège, B-4000, Liège, Belgium,1 Genetics of Microorganisms Laboratory, Department of Life Sciences, Université de Liège, B-4000, Liège, Belgium2
Received 20 April 2006/ Accepted 5 July 2006
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In land plants, the ND7 and ND9 polypeptides are also encoded in the organelle genome. In maize, the NCS2 mitochondrial mutation is a deletion of the 3' end of the nd4 gene, which creates a fused nd4-nd7 chimeric gene and prevents the assembly of the whole complex (43, 51). NCS2 mutant plants, which are maintained at the heteroplasmic state (a mixture of normal and mutated mitochondrial genomes), display poor growth, pale striping of leaves, and decreased yield of kernels. Cytoplasmic male-sterile mutants I and II of Nicotiana sylvestris, with a deletion of the nd7 mitochondrial gene, show reduced respiration and breakdown of complex I activity and assembly (34, 63). Mutations affecting mitochondrion-encoded subunits are also known to be responsible for many hereditary diseases in humans (12, 74). However, due to the heteroplasmic state of the cells that contain both normal and mutant mitochondria and to the presence of allelic variants, it is often difficult to establish the real impact of these mutations on complex I assembly and activity in patients. In this respect, the unicellular green alga C. reinhardtii constitutes an invaluable tool to study the role of the ND subunits since homoplasmic mutations that affect mitochondrial genes encoding respiratory chain components are not lethal in this organism (53, 69). Moreover, genetic transformation allowing the insertion of point mutations into these genes has been very recently achieved (70). Previously, characterization of mutations altering the nd1, nd4, and nd6 mitochondrial genes allowed us to determine the impact of the loss of the corresponding subunits on the activity and assembly of the enzyme (6). The mtDNA of Chlamydomonadaceae algae has the particularity that it codes for only five complex I subunits (ND1, -2, -4, -5, and -6) and lacks the genes that encode the ND3 and ND4L subunits (4, 57). This observation led to the suggestion that the corresponding genes have been transferred to the nucleus (60). Thanks to the data of the Chlamydomonas nuclear genome sequencing (33) (data available at the Joint Genome Institute website, http://genome.jgi-psf.org/Chlre3/Chlre3.home.html), we have identified the NUO3 and NUO11 nuclear genes as homologs of the ND3 and ND4L coding sequences, respectively (7, 8).
In this work, we investigate the modifications that have occurred following the transfer of these two genes to the nucleus, which allows their proper expression, and the sorting and import of their polypeptidic products to the mitochondria. Moreover, to analyze the role of ND3 and ND4L subunits, we here describe the suppression of NUO3 and NUO11 gene expression and determine the impact of the loss of the corresponding subunits on the activity and assembly of complex I and other respiratory chain complexes.
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Escherichia coli DH5
was used for cloning gene and cDNA sequences, and E. coli transformants were grown in Luria medium in the presence of ampicillin (50 µg/ml) at 37°C.
Construction of plasmids for dsRNA expression. The pNB1 plasmid (2,895 bp) used to express double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) contains a 229-bp chimeric strong promoter comprising 84 bp of the C. reinhardtii nitrate reductase (NIA1 gene) promoter and 98 bp of the C. reinhardtii ß-tubulin (TUB1 gene) minimal promoter. This NIA1/TUB1 promoter is inserted in the XbaI and HindIII sites of the pUC19 vector (50) (Fig. 1A).
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FIG. 1. Schematic representation of dsRNAi constructs. XbaI/HindIII fragments of pNB1 (A), pND3-RNAi (B), and pND4L-RNAi (C). NIA1/TUB1, 229-bp chimeric promoter. Numbers within rectangles correspond to the selected exons of the NUO3 and NUO11 genes (i, intron).
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Construction of plasmid pND4L-RNAi (4,190 bp). Two NUO11 gene fragments containing a 90-bp intron (541 bp and 742 bp) (GenBank accession number AY216718 [GenBank] ) were amplified by PCR with the primer ND4L-1F (5'-ATCGATAAGCTTTAGAGTCACAAGAATGTCGCGGA-3') in association with ND4L-3R (5'-AAGCTTCCATGGGATACCGGCCCAGAACATCATGT-3') and ND4L-2R (5'-AAGCTTCCATGGGTGGAAGTACGCCACGCACAG-3'), respectively. The cloning strategy into pNB1 was the same as for the pND3-RNAi construct. It gave rise to the pND4L-RNAi plasmid to be used for RNA inactivation of NUO11 (Fig. 1C).
Transformation of C. reinhardtii and selection of RNAi clones. Transformation of the Chlamydomonas cw15 arg7-8 mt+ strain was carried out using the glass bead method (46) with 5 µg of plasmid pRNAi (linearized with ScaI for pND3-RNAi or SspI for pND4L-RNAi) and 1 µg of pASL, linearized with BamHI. This pASL plasmid bears the Chlamydomonas ARG7 gene that codes for the argininosuccinate lyase (16) and is used as a selectable marker. Prototroph transformants were selected on Tris-acetate-phosphate agar plates. The presence of sequences belonging to the right and to the left part of the RNAi plasmids in the transformants was checked by PCR with primers hybridizing in the NUO3 or NUO11 sequences and in the vector (universal primers 5'-GTAAAACGACGGCCAG-3' and 5'-CAGGAAACAGCTATGAC-3') on a DNA extract prepared as described elsewhere (58). The stability of the phenotype observed for the transformants mentioned in this study was checked 1 year after their isolation.
RNA analyses. Total RNA was extracted from 5 x 108 cells as previously described (49). For RNA blot analyses, RNA (15 µg) was separated on 0.8% agarose-formaldehyde gels and transferred onto Hybond N+ membrane (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Digoxigenin-labeled PCR products of cDNA fragments were used as gene probes and detected with anti-digoxigenin-AP conjugates and CDP-Star as substrate (Roche). ND4L-1F and ND4L-3R primers were used to synthesize the probe for detection of NUO11 transcripts; ND3-3F and ND3-2R primers were used for NUO3; ND9-3F (5'-CAGGAGCCCACGATATACACCACG-3') and ND9-2R (5'-GCGGTGGTTGAACACCTTGCAGA-3') were used for NUO9 (GenBank accession number AY351261 [GenBank] ); ND7-1F (5'-GAACAACTTCACGCTGAACTTCGG-3') and ND7-9R (5'-TGAACTGCATCTTGCCGTACGC-3') were used for NUO7 (GenBank accession number AY347483 [GenBank] ); ESSS-3F (5'-CTCAGACAGGCGGAGGCA-3') and ESSS-6R (5'-TGCGCAACGAGTACAAGG-5') were used for NUO17 (GenBank accession number AY538676 [GenBank] ); NUOP1-1F (5'-ATGGGCTGGGCGTACTCTG-3') and NUOP1-3R (5'-CTCCCCAGTGCACATTACCTC-3') were used for NUOP1 (GenBank accession number AY549572 [GenBank] ).
Protein complex analyses. The starting material was purified mitochondria (6) or crude membrane fractions (68). The protein content was determined by the Bradford method (2).
Activity of complexes I, IV, and NADH:ferricyanide oxidoreductase was measured as previously described (6, 68).
To conduct blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (BN-PAGE) analyses, protein complexes were first solubilized in the presence of 2.5% (wt/vol) dodecylmaltoside, 375 mM 6-aminohexanoic acid, 250 mM EDTA, and 25 mM Bis-Tris, pH 7.0, and centrifuged for 20 min at 15,000 x g at 4°C to remove insoluble matters. One percent (wt/vol) sodium taurodeoxycholate was then added to the supernatant prior to separation by electrophoresis on a 4 to 12% acrylamide gradient BN gel (73). NADH/nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) staining and Coomassie blue staining of the gels were performed as previously published (7).
BN gels were electroblotted (20) according to standard protocols. The following antisera raised in rabbits were used: polyclonal antiserum against whole purified complex I from N. crassa (provided by H. Weiss and U. Schulte) or monoclonal antiserum against the PSST subunit from Yarrowia lipolytica (provided by V. Zickermann and U. Brandt). Detection was performed using a BM Chemiluminescence Western blotting kit (Roche) with anti-rabbit peroxidase-conjugated antibodies.
In silico analyses. Frequency of codon utilization was compared with data available for C. reinhardtii nuclear genes (http://www.kazusa.or.jp/codon/). Alpha-helix predictions were computed with the Deleage-Roux and Levitt scales with the Protscale program on the Expasy server (http://us.expasy.org/). The positions of residues along alpha helixes (3.6 residues per turn) were determined with the Pepwheel program (http://emboss.sourceforge.net/apps/pepwheel.html). Hydropathy profiles were determined by using the scale of Kyte and Doolittle with a window of seven residues (48). Local hydrophobicity (<H>) and average regional hydrophobicity (termed mesohydrophobicity) were calculated using scanning windows of 17 and 60 to 80 residues, respectively, with the MITOPROT, version 2.0, program (http://ihg.gsf.de/ihg/mitoprot.html) (11).
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To be efficiently expressed, mitochondrial genes that have been transferred to the nucleus have to acquire several distinct traits typical of nuclear genes and absent in mitochondrial genes (3, 29). Moreover, this transfer of genes from the mitochondrial genome to the nucleus also raises the question of the import of their hydrophobic polypeptidic products. We thus investigated the expression of the NUO3 and NUO11 nuclear genes and the presence of modifications in their sequences.
(i) Gene expression. To analyze NUO3 and NUO11 gene expression, RNA blots from wild-type cells were hybridized with cDNA probes. Strong single signals were detected at 1.5 and 1.6 kb, respectively (Fig. 2, WT lanes in top blots), indicating that both genes are highly expressed. The sizes of the transcripts were in good agreement with the sizes predicted from the GenBank database (1,585 bp for NUO3, accession number AY351265 [GenBank] ; 1,616 bp for NUO11, accession number AY216718 [GenBank] ). Several methionine codons were found in the 5' ends of the NUO3 and NUO11 cDNA sequences. For each sequence, the first ATG was chosen as the putative initiation codon because its neighborhood was the closest to the (A/C)A(A/C)(A/C)ATG(G/C)C(C/G) consensus sequence defined for initiation codons of Chlamydomonas nuclear genes (76). The ND3 and ND4L polypeptides should thus be 279 and 227 amino acids long, respectively (GenBank accession numbers AAQ55461 [GenBank] and AAO61142 [GenBank] ).
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FIG. 2. Transcriptional analysis of several complex I genes in wild-type and coND3 and coND4L mutant strains. Hybridization patterns were obtained with NUO3, NUO7, NUO9, NUO11, NUO17, and NUOP1 probes on RNA blots from wild-type, coND3, and coND4L mutants.
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(iii) Acquisition of polyadenylation signal. The polyadenylation signal of C. reinhardtii nuclear genes (TGTAA) (76) is found at the end of both cDNA sequences.
(iv) Acquisition of introns. Intronic sequences with orthodox splicing sites (76) were identified; six were found in the NUO3 gene, and one was found in the NUO11 gene (Joint Genome Institute accession numbers 24195 and 58686).
(v) Presence of a putative mitochondrial targeting sequence.
The large majority of nucleus-encoded mitochondrial proteins contain an N-terminal targeting sequence (MTS, or mitochondrial targeting sequence) that drives the import to the mitochondria (28). When the deduced full-length ND3 and ND4L sequences were compared to the polypeptidic sequences of other organisms (prokaryotic and eukaryotic), long N-terminal extensions of about 160 and 130 residues, respectively, were found (Fig. 3A). Such unusually long presequences (>100 amino acids) are also present in ATP6, COX IIA, and COX III proteins from Chlamydomonas (26, 61, 62) and may improve the efficiency of import of nucleus-encoded, highly hydrophobic proteins across mitochondrial membranes (10, 27). Both ND3 and ND4L N-terminal sequences possess the characteristics of an MTS. (a) Their amino acid composition is similar to the composition described for the MTS of land plants (28); they are rich in Arg (7.8%), Leu (10%), Ala (15%), and Ser (10%) and poor in Cys, His, Ile, Trp, and Asp (about 1% each). (b) The N-terminal residues (1 to 17) have the potential to form an amphiphilic
helix with one hydrophilic positively charged face and one apolar face (Fig. 3A). This amphiphilicity seems to be essential for the function of the MTS (23, 28). (c) Putative cleavage sites as defined by Glaser et al. (28) are found at positions that are consistent with the length of their protein homologues encoded by mtDNA (indicated by
), i.e., after residue 158 (RTFQ
FT) for ND3 and after residue 123 (RSY
YT) for ND4L. In particular, the deduced molecular mass of mature ND3 subunit (13,547 Da) is in good agreement with its identification by mass spectrometry as a 14-kDa band in a sodium dodecyl sulfate gel (7).
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FIG. 3. In silico analyses of C. reinhardtii ND3 and ND4L polypeptides. (A) Predicted alpha helixes are shown as large arrows, and positions of the charged amino acid residues within helixes are indicated. TM, transmembrane helix. Putative cleavage sites of the transit peptide are indicated by vertical arrows. (B) Maximal local hydrophobicity versus mesohydrophobicity plots for ND subunits 3 and 4L from different organisms using the Kyte and Doolittle scale (48). Arrows point to the spots representing the Chlamydomonas polypeptides. The GenBank accession numbers of the ND3 and ND4L sequences, respectively, for the identified points are as follows: A (C. reinhardtii), AAQ55461 and AAO61142; B (Beta vulgaris), BAA99467 and BAA99307; C (Danio rerio), AAF74304 and AAF74305; D (Rattus norvegicus), AAV31046 and AAV31047; E (Reclinomonas americana), AAD11900 and AAD11914; F (Chondrus crispus), CAA87616 and CAA87597; G (Cyanidioschyzon merolae), NP_059358 and BAA36543; H (Prototheca wickerhamii), Q37625 and Q37627; I (Homo sapiens), AAX55498 and AAX55499; J (Xenopus laevis), P03900 and P03904; K (A. thaliana), P92533 and CAA47479; L (O. sativa), BAC19871 and CAC79145; M (Gallus gallus), AAC83281 and BAE16034; N (Boa constrictor), YP_313688 and YP_313689; O (Marchantia polymorpha), P26847 and P26851; P (Equus asinus), P92482 and P92483; Q (Scenedesmus obliquus), CAB90363 and CAB90362; R (Aspergillus niger), ABA33725 and Q5YF91; S (Thalassiosira pseudonana), YP_316616 and YP_316614; T (Anopheles gambiae), NP_008075 and P34858; U (Drosophila melanogaster), NP_008283 and NP_008286; V (Y. lipolytica), Q9B6C7 and CAC28106; W (Caenorhabditis elegans), P24895 and P24886.
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We thus show here that, following their transfer to the nucleus, both the NUO3 and NUO11 genes have acquired several features allowing their proper expression and the importation of their translation products into mitochondria: acquisition of an efficient promoter, as suggested by the abundance of the transcripts; modification of codon frequencies to the usage of the nucleus; acquisition of a polyadenylation signal and of one or several introns that are essential in the expression and subsequent maturation of the mRNA (67); addition of a mitochondrial targeting amino acid presequence; and hydrophobicity diminution of transmembrane stretches that probably promote sorting and import to mitochondria.
Transformants inactivated for the NUO3 and NUO11 nuclear genes can be isolated by RNAi. In Chlamydomonas, efficient targeted gene disruption by homologous recombination is not yet available for nuclear genes (59). However, interference with the expression of specific gene by dsRNA is a powerful tool to investigate protein function in this organism (25, 75). To suppress the expression of NUO3 and NUO11 genes, a strain of Chlamydomonas lacking cell walls and auxotrophic for arginine was cotransformed with the plasmid pASL (bearing the ARG7 gene) and the plasmid designed for RNAi (pND3-RNAi or pND4L-RNAi) (Fig. 1) (see Materials and Methods). One hundred arg+ colonies of each transformation experiment were selected and tested by PCR for the presence of sequences belonging to the pRNAi plasmids, as described in Materials and Methods. A total of 26 and 28 positive colonies, called coND3 and coND4L clones, respectively, were obtained in transformation experiments with the pND3-RNAi and pND4L-RNAi constructs, respectively.
To investigate whether complex I enzyme activity was suppressed in the cotransformants, high-molecular-mass complexes from crude membrane fractions were separated by BN-PAGE. NADH dehydrogenase activity of the complex I matrical arm was then tested using NBT as an electron acceptor. Wild-type complex I activity was associated with a single band at 950 kDa (6, 7). Among the 28 coND4L clones analyzed, only two (89 and 97) showed no activity or very low activity (observed only after 2 h of incubation). Similarly, only two clones (33 and 43) of the 26 coND3 isolates showed no activity or very low staining activity, whereas the other ones exhibited no significant modification of complex I coloration compared to wild type (Fig. 4 and data not shown).
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FIG. 4. Screening of clones for complex I defect. Crude membrane extracts (120 µg of protein solubilized with 1.5% [wt/wt] dodecyl-ß-D-maltoside) of Chlamydomonas strains were loaded on a BN gel. After electrophoresis, the gel was stained for NADH dehydrogenase activity of complex I using NBT as an electron acceptor. Mitochondrial complex I is detected at 950 kDa. The two lower-molecular-mass bands (about 750 and 700 kDa) are shown as loading controls and correspond to green bands of photosystem II and I, respectively, associated with light harvesting complexes (71).
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TABLE 1. Activities of respiratory chain complexes in wild-type and transformant strains
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Taken together, these results demonstrate that the complex I enzyme activity defect detected in the four mutants is due to the absence of or to a drastic decrease in the ND3 and ND4L protein levels triggered by the expression of the NUO3 or NUO11 dsRNA. These results also indicate that no transcription downregulation of nuclear genes coding for other complex I subunits is engaged following inactivation of NUO3 and NUO11 gene expression. As observed in several other experiments designed for RNA interference in Chlamydomonas (75), the rates of clones altered in NUO3 or NUO11 gene expression were less than 10%. Such low frequencies of transformed clones for which suppression of gene expression was effective can be due to rearrangements of the transformant plasmid at the time of the insertion process or to the integration of the construction in transcriptionally inactive areas of the genome, as previously described in Chlamydomonas (46).
Loss of complex I assembly in ND3- and ND4L-deficient strains; function and localization of both proteins within the membrane domain of complex I. In order to investigate the impact of the loss of ND3 or ND4L on complex I assembly, mitochondria were purified from wild-type and mutant cells, and the organelle extracts were subjected to BN-PAGE analyses. By staining the gel with Coomassie blue, four main bands of 250, 500, 950, and 1,700 kDa were observed over 100 kDa for wild type (Fig. 5A). They correspond to respiratory chain complexes IV, III (dimeric state), I, and V (ATP synthase under dimeric state), respectively (7, 78). No signal was observed at 950 kDa in the mutants, while the amount of complexes III, IV, and V was not altered. Moreover, no additional blue band that could correspond to a putative complex I subcomplex was found.
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FIG. 5. Complex I assembly in coND3 and coND4L mutants. For each strain, 150 µg of total mitochondrial protein was loaded on a BN gel. After electrophoresis, the gel was submitted to Coomassie blue staining (A) or NADH/NBT staining (B) or blotted and probed with antisera against the N. crassa whole complex I (C) or against the Y. lipolytica PSST subunit (D). I, III2, IV, and V2 correspond to respiratory chain complexes I, III (dimeric state), IV, and V (dimeric state), respectively.
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Finally, when the gel obtained from purified mitochondria was submitted to NADH/NBT staining, the 950-kDa complex I activity was observed solely in the wild-type mitochondria (as previously shown from the crude membrane fraction in Fig. 4), but an additional signal, in the range of 200 kDa, was also observed in both wild-type and mutant strains (Fig. 5B). We previously demonstrated that this 200-kDa signal corresponds to a free soluble enzyme present in Chlamydomonas mitochondria and displays NADH:ferricyanide and NADH:duroquinone oxydoreductase activities (6). Immunological studies, moreover, showed (6) that this enzyme comprises the 49-kDa (NUOD) and the 76-kDa (NUOG) polypeptides, two components of the complex I peripheral arm which are thought to be involved in the electron flow from NADH to ubiquinone. Hence, the 200-kDa soluble enzyme can be considered as a fragment originating from the peripheral arm of the complex I enzyme. Interestingly, a similar 200- to 300-kDa NADH dehydrogenase that contains the 76-kDa subunit has also been identified in mitochondria from potato and pea (5). In contrast to the 49- and 76-kDa subunits, the PSST subunit could be absent from the Chlamydomonas 200-kDa subcomplex, since no signal was obtained using an antibody directed against the Y. lipolytica PSST (Fig. 5D). Finally, it has to be mentioned that the 200-kDa subcomplex is much larger than the type II NADH dehydrogenases (55 to 65 kDa) found in land plant mitochondria (22) and also probably present in Chlamydomonas, as suggested from sequence alignment studies (8).
While the presence of ND3 and ND4L in mitochondrial complex I has been demonstrated for more than 20 years (24), very little is known about the role of these two subunits in the activity and assembly of the eukaryotic enzyme. Some data were recently obtained, mainly by studying their prokaryotic counterparts. Concerning the ND3 subunit, it has been shown in the bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans that the corresponding polypeptide (Nqo7) directly interacts with subunits Nqo6 (PSST) and Nqo4 (49 kDa) of the peripheral arm (17, 41). Both of these hydrophilic polypeptides are considered to bind the last iron-sulfur cluster (N2) that reduces the quinone at the interface between the two arms and to participate to a quinone binding site (15, 19, 37, 44, 64). In E. coli, evidence of the implication of ND3 in the enzyme activity is provided by the double mutant D79N/E81Q, which almost completely lacks the energy-transducing activity of the enzyme (40). Similarly, point mutations affecting the nd3 gene sequence in human cause specific defects in complex I activity (13, 56, 77). With regard to ND4L, this subunit could be involved in the proton translocation machinery of the enzyme. As a matter of fact, in E. coli, NuoK (ND4L) along with NuoL (ND5), NuoM (ND4), and NuoN (ND2) shows primary sequence similarity to antiporters of the prokaryotic Mrp class (54, 55). Moreover, mutations of nearly perfectly conserved Glu-36 in NuoK (ND4L) of E. coli lead to almost null activities of coupled electron transfer with a concomitant loss of generation of the electrochemical gradient (42, 45).
Not all hydrophobic subunits of the core enzyme play the same role in the assembly of complex I. As a matter of fact, in the course of the characterization of other Chlamydomonas complex I mutants (6), we showed that the loss of ND4 or ND4+ND5 subunits leads to the assembly of a 700-kDa membrane-bound subcomplex; however, as for ND3 and ND4L, the absence of intact ND1 or ND6 subunits totally prevents complex I assembly. This suggests that ND4 and ND5, on one hand, and ND1, ND3, ND4L, and ND6, on the other hand, are located in two different domains of the complex I membrane arm. This hypothesis is in good agreement with the structural models proposed for the localization of these subunits within the bovine complex I (9, 72) and the prokaryotic NDH-1 enzyme (39). Following this hypothesis, we propose a preliminary model for the assembly pathway of Chlamydomonas complex I (Fig. 6). In this model, the association of the 200-kDa soluble fragment displaying NADH dehydrogenase activity (see above) with other hydrophilic subunits and with hydrophobic proteins (notably ND1, ND3, ND4L, and ND6) would lead to the formation of a membrane-bound 700-kDa subcomplex. Then, the association of another membrane domain located at a distal position and comprising ND4, ND5, and other hydrophobic proteins would give the 950-kDa fully assembled complex I. This simple model is very close to the model that was proposed for the human complex I assembly from the study of various mutant cell lines producing different assembly intermediates (1). A divergent model was proposed for complex I assembly in the fungus N. crassa, based on the existence of a stable peripheral arm composed mainly of hydrophilic proteins and of a membrane arm composed of hydrophobic subunits (79). A priori, the existence of two different complex I assembly pathways is rather surprising. The discrepancy between the two models could be related to the absence or the nondetection of some assembly intermediates in one of the other organisms. Some factors specific to the organisms could also influence the relative stability of the subcomplexes: the rate of proteolysis of unassembled protein sets or the presence of specific chaperones. In this context, only two chaperones involved in complex I assembly have been identified to date: CIA30 and CIA84 (47). While CIA30 is widely found among eukaryotes, homologous sequences of CIA84 are found only in fungi (8). A more detailed analysis of the composition of the various subcomplexes is required to elucidate the assembly pathway of the huge multimeric complex I enzyme.
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FIG. 6. Schematic representation of the putative assembly pathway of C. reinhardtii complex I (reference 6 and the present study). The locations of six hydrophobic subunits within subcomplexes are also indicated.
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We are grateful to D. González-Halphen for critical reading of the manuscript and to H. Weiss and U. Schulte (Institut fur Biochimie, Düsseldorf) and V. Zickermann and U. Brandt (Institut fur Biochimie, Frankfurt) for the generous gifts of antisera. We also thank M. Radoux and E. Schmetz for technical assistance.
The gene sequence data were produced by the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (http://www.jgi.doe.gov/) and are provided for use in this publication only.
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