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Mutations in MTFMT underlie a human disorder of formylation causing impaired mitochondrial translation

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posted on 2011-09-07, 00:00 authored by Elena J Tucker, Steven G Hershman, Caroline Köhrer, Casey A Belcher-Timme, Jinal Patel, Olga A Goldberger, John Christodoulou, Jonathon M Silberstein, Matthew McKenzieMatthew McKenzie, Michael T Ryan, Alison G Compton, Jacob D Jaffe, Steven A Carr, Sarah E Calvo, Uttam L RajBhandary, David R Thorburn, Vamsi K Mootha
The metazoan mitochondrial translation machinery is unusual in having a single tRNA(Met) that fulfills the dual role of the initiator and elongator tRNA(Met). A portion of the Met-tRNA(Met) pool is formylated by mitochondrial methionyl-tRNA formyltransferase (MTFMT) to generate N-formylmethionine-tRNA(Met) (fMet-tRNA(met)), which is used for translation initiation; however, the requirement of formylation for initiation in human mitochondria is still under debate. Using targeted sequencing of the mtDNA and nuclear exons encoding the mitochondrial proteome (MitoExome), we identified compound heterozygous mutations in MTFMT in two unrelated children presenting with Leigh syndrome and combined OXPHOS deficiency. Patient fibroblasts exhibit severe defects in mitochondrial translation that can be rescued by exogenous expression of MTFMT. Furthermore, patient fibroblasts have dramatically reduced fMet-tRNA(Met) levels and an abnormal formylation profile of mitochondrially translated COX1. Our findings demonstrate that MTFMT is critical for efficient human mitochondrial translation and reveal a human disorder of Met-tRNA(Met) formylation.

History

Journal

Cell metabolism

Volume

14

Issue

3

Pagination

428 - 434

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1550-4131

eISSN

1932-7420

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Elsevier Inc.