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Negative regulation of mitochondrial transcription by mitochondrial topoisomerase I
Author(s) -
Stefan Sobek,
Ilaria Dalla Rosa,
Yves Pommier,
Beatrice Bornholz,
Faiza Kalfalah,
Hongliang Zhang,
Rudolf J. Wiesner,
JürgenChristoph von Kleist-Retzow,
Frank Hillebrand,
Heiner Schaal,
Christian Mielke,
Morten O. Christensen,
Fritz Boege
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkt768
Subject(s) - biology , mitochondrial dna , topoisomerase , transcription (linguistics) , mitochondrion , microbiology and biotechnology , dnaja3 , mt rnr1 , biochemistry , mitochondrial fusion , dna , gene , linguistics , philosophy
Mitochondrial topoisomerase I is a genetically distinct mitochondria-dedicated enzyme with a crucial but so far unknown role in the homeostasis of mitochondrial DNA metabolism. Here, we present data suggesting a negative regulatory function in mitochondrial transcription or transcript stability. Deficiency or depletion of mitochondrial topoisomerase I increased mitochondrial transcripts, whereas overexpression lowered mitochondrial transcripts, depleted respiratory complexes I, III and IV, decreased cell respiration and raised superoxide levels. Acute depletion of mitochondrial topoisomerase I triggered neither a nuclear mito-biogenic stress response nor compensatory topoisomerase IIβ upregulation, suggesting the concomitant increase in mitochondrial transcripts was due to release of a local inhibitory effect. Mitochondrial topoisomerase I was co-immunoprecipitated with mitochondrial RNA polymerase. It selectively accumulated and rapidly exchanged at a subset of nucleoids distinguished by the presence of newly synthesized RNA and/or mitochondrial RNA polymerase. The inactive Y559F-mutant behaved similarly without affecting mitochondrial transcripts. In conclusion, mitochondrial topoisomerase I dampens mitochondrial transcription and thereby alters respiratory capacity. The mechanism involves selective association of the active enzyme with transcriptionally active nucleoids and a direct interaction with mitochondrial RNA polymerase. The inhibitory role of topoisomerase I in mitochondrial transcription is strikingly different from the stimulatory role of topoisomerase I in nuclear transcription.

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