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Expression of alternative oxidase in Drosophila ameliorates diverse phenotypes due to cytochrome oxidase deficiency

  • Kia K. Kemppainen
  • , Juho Rinne
  • , Ashwin Sriram
  • , Matti Lakanmaa
  • , Akbar Zeb
  • , Tea Tuomela
  • , Anna Popplestone
  • , Satpal Singh
  • , Alberto Sanz
  • , Pierre Rustin
  • , Howard T. Jacobs
  • Tampere University
  • Hôpital Robert Debré-Paris
  • University of Helsinki

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

56 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mitochondrial dysfunction is a significant factor in human disease, ranging fromsystemic disorders of childhood to cardiomyopathy, ischaemia and neurodegeneration. Cytochrome oxidase, the terminal enzyme of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, is a frequent target. Lower eukaryotes possess alternative respiratory-chain enzymes that provide non-proton-translocating by passes for respiratory complexes I (single-subunit reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenases, e.g. Ndi1 fromyeast) or III + IV [alternative oxidase (AOX)], under conditions of respiratory stress or overload. In previous studies, itwas shown that transfer of yeast Ndi1 or Ciona intestinalis AOX to Drosophila was able toovercome the lethality produced by toxins or partial knockdown of complex I or IV. Here, we show that AOX can provide a complete or substantial rescue of a range of phenotypes induced by global or tissue-specific knockdown of different cIV subunits, including integral subunits required for catalysis, as well as peripheral subunits required for multimerization and assembly. AOX was also able to overcome the pupal lethality produced by muscle-specific knockdown of subunit CoVb, although the rescued flies were short lived and had a motility defect. cIV knockdown in neurons was not lethal during development but produced a rapidly progressing locomotor and seizure-sensitivity phenotype, which was substantially alleviated by AOX. Expression of Ndi1 exacerbated the neuronal phenotype produced by cIV knockdown. Ndi1 expressed in place of essential cI subunits produced a distinct residual phenotype of delayed development, bang sensitivity and male sterility. These findings confirm the potential utility of alternative respiratory chain enzymes as tools to combat mitochondrial disease, while indicating important limitations thereof.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberddt601
Pages (from-to)2078-2093
Number of pages16
JournalHuman Molecular Genetics
Volume23
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2014

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