Biochemistry and Pharmacology - Research Publications

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    Multi-omics identifies large mitoribosomal subunit instability caused by pathogenic MRPL39 variants as a cause of pediatric onset mitochondrial disease
    Amarasekera, SSC ; Hock, DH ; Lake, NJ ; Calvo, SE ; Gronborg, SW ; Krzesinski, E ; Amor, DJ ; Fahey, MC ; Simons, C ; Wibrand, F ; Mootha, VK ; Lek, M ; Lunke, S ; Stark, Z ; ostergaard, E ; Christodoulou, J ; Thorburn, DR ; Stroud, DA ; Compton, AG (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2023-07-20)
    MRPL39 encodes one of 52 proteins comprising the large subunit of the mitochondrial ribosome (mitoribosome). In conjunction with 30 proteins in the small subunit, the mitoribosome synthesizes the 13 subunits of the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) system encoded by mitochondrial Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). We used multi-omics and gene matching to identify three unrelated individuals with biallelic variants in MRPL39 presenting with multisystem diseases with severity ranging from lethal, infantile-onset (Leigh syndrome spectrum) to milder with survival into adulthood. Clinical exome sequencing of known disease genes failed to diagnose these patients; however quantitative proteomics identified a specific decrease in the abundance of large but not small mitoribosomal subunits in fibroblasts from the two patients with severe phenotype. Re-analysis of exome sequencing led to the identification of candidate single heterozygous variants in mitoribosomal genes MRPL39 (both patients) and MRPL15. Genome sequencing identified a shared deep intronic MRPL39 variant predicted to generate a cryptic exon, with transcriptomics and targeted studies providing further functional evidence for causation. The patient with the milder disease was homozygous for a missense variant identified through trio exome sequencing. Our study highlights the utility of quantitative proteomics in detecting protein signatures and in characterizing gene-disease associations in exome-unsolved patients. We describe Relative Complex Abundance analysis of proteomics data, a sensitive method that can identify defects in OXPHOS disorders to a similar or greater sensitivity to the traditional enzymology. Relative Complex Abundance has potential utility for functional validation or prioritization in many hundreds of inherited rare diseases where protein complex assembly is disrupted.
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    TEFM variants impair mitochondrial transcription causing childhood-onset neurological disease
    Van Haute, L ; O'Connor, E ; Diaz-Maldonado, H ; Munro, B ; Polavarapu, K ; Hock, DH ; Arunachal, G ; Athanasiou-Fragkouli, A ; Bardhan, M ; Barth, M ; Bonneau, D ; Brunetti-Pierri, N ; Cappuccio, G ; Caruana, NJ ; Dominik, N ; Goel, H ; Helman, G ; Houlden, H ; Lenaers, G ; Mention, K ; Murphy, D ; Nandeesh, B ; Olimpio, C ; Powell, CA ; Preethish-Kumar, V ; Procaccio, V ; Rius, R ; Rebelo-Guiomar, P ; Simons, C ; Vengalil, S ; Zaki, MS ; Ziegler, A ; Thorburn, DR ; Stroud, DA ; Maroofian, R ; Christodoulou, J ; Gustafsson, C ; Nalini, A ; Lochmueller, H ; Minczuk, M ; Horvath, R (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2023-02-23)
    Mutations in the mitochondrial or nuclear genomes are associated with a diverse group of human disorders characterized by impaired mitochondrial respiration. Within this group, an increasing number of mutations have been identified in nuclear genes involved in mitochondrial RNA biology. The TEFM gene encodes the mitochondrial transcription elongation factor responsible for enhancing the processivity of mitochondrial RNA polymerase, POLRMT. We report for the first time that TEFM variants are associated with mitochondrial respiratory chain deficiency and a wide range of clinical presentations including mitochondrial myopathy with a treatable neuromuscular transmission defect. Mechanistically, we show muscle and primary fibroblasts from the affected individuals have reduced levels of promoter distal mitochondrial RNA transcripts. Finally, tefm knockdown in zebrafish embryos resulted in neuromuscular junction abnormalities and abnormal mitochondrial function, strengthening the genotype-phenotype correlation. Our study highlights that TEFM regulates mitochondrial transcription elongation and its defect results in variable, tissue-specific neurological and neuromuscular symptoms.
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    Sideroflexin 4 is a complex I assembly factor that interacts with the MCIA complex and is required for the assembly of the ND2 module
    Jackson, TD ; Crameri, JJ ; Muellner-Wong, L ; Frazier, AE ; Palmer, CS ; Formosa, LE ; Hock, DH ; Fujihara, KM ; Stait, T ; Sharpe, AJ ; Thorburn, DR ; Ryan, MT ; Stroud, DA ; Stojanovski, D (NATL ACAD SCIENCES, 2022-03-29)
    SignificanceMitochondria are double-membraned eukaryotic organelles that house the proteins required for generation of ATP, the energy currency of cells. ATP generation within mitochondria is performed by five multisubunit complexes (complexes I to V), the assembly of which is an intricate process. Mutations in subunits of these complexes, or the suite of proteins that help them assemble, lead to a severe multisystem condition called mitochondrial disease. We show that SFXN4, a protein that causes mitochondrial disease when mutated, assists with the assembly of complex I. This finding explains why mutations in SFXN4 cause mitochondrial disease and is surprising because SFXN4 belongs to a family of amino acid transporter proteins, suggesting that it has undergone a dramatic shift in function through evolution.
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    Biallelic Variants in PYROXD2 Cause a Severe Infantile Metabolic Disorder Affecting Mitochondrial Function
    Van Bergen, NJ ; Hock, DH ; Spencer, L ; Massey, S ; Stait, T ; Stark, Z ; Lunke, S ; Roesley, A ; Peters, H ; Lee, JY ; Le Fevre, A ; Heath, O ; Mignone, C ; Yang, JY-M ; Ryan, MM ; D'Arcy, C ; Nash, M ; Smith, S ; Caruana, NJ ; Thorburn, DR ; Stroud, DA ; White, SM ; Christodoulou, J ; Brown, NJ (MDPI, 2022-01)
    Pyridine Nucleotide-Disulfide Oxidoreductase Domain 2 (PYROXD2; previously called YueF) is a mitochondrial inner membrane/matrix-residing protein and is reported to regulate mitochondrial function. The clinical importance of PYROXD2 has been unclear, and little is known of the protein's precise biological function. In the present paper, we report biallelic variants in PYROXD2 identified by genome sequencing in a patient with suspected mitochondrial disease. The child presented with acute neurological deterioration, unresponsive episodes, and extreme metabolic acidosis, and received rapid genomic testing. He died shortly after. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain imaging showed changes resembling Leigh syndrome, one of the more common childhood mitochondrial neurological diseases. Functional studies in patient fibroblasts showed a heightened sensitivity to mitochondrial metabolic stress and increased mitochondrial superoxide levels. Quantitative proteomic analysis demonstrated decreased levels of subunits of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I, and both the small and large subunits of the mitochondrial ribosome, suggesting a mitoribosomal defect. Our findings support the critical role of PYROXD2 in human cells, and suggest that the biallelic PYROXD2 variants are associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, and can plausibly explain the child's clinical presentation.
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    Fatal Perinatal Mitochondrial Cardiac Failure Caused by Recurrent De Novo Duplications in the ATAD3 Locus
    Frazier, AE ; Compton, AG ; Kishita, Y ; Hock, DH ; Welch, AE ; Amarasekera, SSC ; Rius, R ; Formosa, LE ; Imai-Okazaki, A ; Francis, D ; Wang, M ; Lake, NJ ; Tregoning, S ; Jabbari, JS ; Lucattini, A ; Nitta, KR ; Ohtake, A ; Murayama, K ; Amor, DJ ; McGillivray, G ; Wong, FY ; van der Knaap, MS ; Vermeulen, RJ ; Wiltshire, EJ ; Fletcher, JM ; Lewis, B ; Baynam, G ; Ellaway, C ; Balasubramaniam, S ; Bhattacharya, K ; Freckmann, M-L ; Arbuckle, S ; Rodriguez, M ; Taft, RJ ; Sadedin, S ; Cowley, MJ ; Minoche, AE ; Calvo, SE ; Mootha, VK ; Ryan, MT ; Okazaki, Y ; Stroud, DA ; Simons, C ; Christodoulou, J ; Thorburn, DR (CELL PRESS, 2021-01-15)
    BACKGROUND: In about half of all patients with a suspected monogenic disease, genomic investigations fail to identify the diagnosis. A contributing factor is the difficulty with repetitive regions of the genome, such as those generated by segmental duplications. The ATAD3 locus is one such region, in which recessive deletions and dominant duplications have recently been reported to cause lethal perinatal mitochondrial diseases characterized by pontocerebellar hypoplasia or cardiomyopathy, respectively. METHODS: Whole exome, whole genome and long-read DNA sequencing techniques combined with studies of RNA and quantitative proteomics were used to investigate 17 subjects from 16 unrelated families with suspected mitochondrial disease. FINDINGS: We report six different de novo duplications in the ATAD3 gene locus causing a distinctive presentation including lethal perinatal cardiomyopathy, persistent hyperlactacidemia, and frequently corneal clouding or cataracts and encephalopathy. The recurrent 68 Kb ATAD3 duplications are identifiable from genome and exome sequencing but usually missed by microarrays. The ATAD3 duplications result in the formation of identical chimeric ATAD3A/ATAD3C proteins, altered ATAD3 complexes and a striking reduction in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation complex I and its activity in heart tissue. CONCLUSIONS: ATAD3 duplications appear to act in a dominant-negative manner and the de novo inheritance infers a low recurrence risk for families, unlike most pediatric mitochondrial diseases. More than 350 genes underlie mitochondrial diseases. In our experience the ATAD3 locus is now one of the five most common causes of nuclear-encoded pediatric mitochondrial disease but the repetitive nature of the locus means ATAD3 diagnoses may be frequently missed by current genomic strategies. FUNDING: Australian NHMRC, US Department of Defense, Japanese AMED and JSPS agencies, Australian Genomics Health Alliance and Australian Mito Foundation.
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    HIGD2A is Required for Assembly of the COX3 Module of Human Mitochondrial Complex IV
    Hock, DH ; Reljic, B ; Ang, C-S ; Muellner-Wong, L ; Mountford, HS ; Compton, AG ; Ryan, MT ; Thorburn, DR ; Stroud, DA (American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2020-07-01)
    Assembly factors play a critical role in the biogenesis of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes I-IV where they assist in the membrane insertion of subunits, attachment of co-factors, and stabilization of assembly intermediates. The major fraction of complexes I, III and IV are present together in large molecular structures known as respiratory chain supercomplexes. Several assembly factors have been proposed as required for supercomplex assembly, including the hypoxia inducible gene 1 domain family member HIGD2A. Using gene-edited human cell lines and extensive steady state, translation and affinity enrichment proteomics techniques we show that loss of HIGD2A leads to defects in the de novo biogenesis of mtDNA-encoded COX3, subsequent accumulation of complex IV intermediates and turnover of COX3 partner proteins. Deletion of HIGD2A also leads to defective complex IV activity. The impact of HIGD2A loss on complex IV was not altered by growth under hypoxic conditions, consistent with its role being in basal complex IV assembly. Although in the absence of HIGD2A we show that mitochondria do contain an altered supercomplex assembly, we demonstrate it to harbor a crippled complex IV lacking COX3. Our results redefine HIGD2A as a classical assembly factor required for building the COX3 module of complex IV.
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    The TIM22 complex mediates the import of sideroflexins and is required for efficient mitochondrial one-carbon metabolism
    Jackson, TD ; Hock, DH ; Fujihara, KM ; Palmer, CS ; Frazier, AE ; Low, YC ; Kang, Y ; Ang, C-S ; Clemons, NJ ; Thorburn, DR ; Stroud, DA ; Stojanovski, D ; Fox, T (AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY, 2021-03-15)
    Acylglycerol kinase (AGK) is a mitochondrial lipid kinase that contributes to protein biogenesis as a subunit of the TIM22 complex at the inner mitochondrial membrane. Mutations in AGK cause Sengers syndrome, an autosomal recessive condition characterized by congenital cataracts, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, skeletal myopathy, and lactic acidosis. We mapped the proteomic changes in Sengers patient fibroblasts and AGKKO cell lines to understand the effects of AGK dysfunction on mitochondria. This uncovered down-regulation of a number of proteins at the inner mitochondrial membrane, including many SLC25 carrier family proteins, which are predicted substrates of the complex. We also observed down-regulation of SFXN proteins, which contain five transmembrane domains, and show that they represent a novel class of TIM22 complex substrate. Perturbed biogenesis of SFXN proteins in cells lacking AGK reduces the proliferative capabilities of these cells in the absence of exogenous serine, suggesting that dysregulation of one-carbon metabolism is a molecular feature in the biology of Sengers syndrome.
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    Multiomic analysis elucidates Complex I deficiency caused by a deep intronic variant in NDUFB10
    Helman, G ; Compton, AG ; Hock, DH ; Walkiewicz, M ; Brett, GR ; Pais, L ; Tan, TY ; De Paoli-Iseppi, R ; Clark, MB ; Christodoulou, J ; White, SM ; Thorburn, DR ; Stroud, DA ; Stark, Z ; Simons, C (WILEY-HINDAWI, 2021-01)
    The diagnosis of Mendelian disorders following uninformative exome and genome sequencing remains a challenging and often unmet need. Following uninformative exome and genome sequencing of a family quartet including two siblings with suspected mitochondrial disorder, RNA sequencing (RNAseq) was pursued in one sibling. Long-read amplicon sequencing was used to determine and quantify transcript structure. Immunoblotting studies and quantitative proteomics were performed to demonstrate functional impact. Differential expression analysis of RNAseq data identified significantly decreased expression of the mitochondrial OXPHOS Complex I subunit NDUFB10 associated with a cryptic exon in intron 1 of NDUFB10, that included an in-frame stop codon. The cryptic exon contained a rare intronic variant that was homozygous in both affected siblings. Immunoblot and quantitative proteomic analysis of fibroblasts revealed decreased abundance of Complex I subunits, providing evidence of isolated Complex I deficiency. Through multiomic analysis we present data implicating a deep intronic variant in NDUFB10 as the cause of mitochondrial disease in two individuals, providing further support of the gene-disease association. This study highlights the importance of transcriptomic and proteomic analyses as complementary diagnostic tools in patients undergoing genome-wide diagnostic evaluation.