Structure of the Human Mitochondrial Ribosome Studied In Situ by Cryoelectron Tomography

Robert Englmeier, Stefan Pfeffer, Friedrich Förster

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Mitochondria maintain their own genome and its corresponding protein synthesis machine, the mitochondrial ribosome (mitoribosome). Mitoribosomes primarily synthesize highly hydrophobic proteins of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Recent studies revealed the complete structure of the isolated mammalian mitoribosome, but its mode of membrane association remained hypothetical. In this study, we used cryoelectron tomography to visualize human mitoribosomes in isolated mitochondria. The subtomogram average of the membrane-associated human mitoribosome reveals a single major contact site with the inner membrane, mediated by the mitochondria-specific protein mL45. A second rRNA-mediated contact site that is present in yeast is absent in humans, resulting in a more variable association of the human mitoribosome with the inner membrane. Despite extensive structural differences of mammalian and fungal mitoribosomal structure, the principal organization of peptide exit tunnel and the mL45 homolog remains invariant, presumably to align the mitoribosome with the membrane-embedded insertion machinery.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1574-1581.e2
    JournalStructure
    Volume25
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2017

    Keywords

    • mitochondria
    • translation
    • ribosome
    • membrane insertion
    • cryoelectron tomography
    • subtomogram analysis
    • phase plate
    • mitoribosome
    • mL45
    • mitochondrial membrane

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