Most cited article - PubMed ID 36075844
Mechanisms and players of mitoribosomal biogenesis revealed in trypanosomatids
The assembly of the mitoribosomal small subunit involves folding and modification of rRNA, and its association with mitoribosomal proteins. This process is assisted by a dynamic network of assembly factors. Conserved methyltransferases Mettl15 and Mettl17 act on the solvent-exposed surface of rRNA. Binding of Mettl17 is associated with the early assembly stage, whereas Mettl15 is involved in the late stage, but the mechanism of transition between the two was unclear. Here, we integrate structural data from Trypanosoma brucei with mammalian homologs and molecular dynamics simulations. We reveal how the interplay of Mettl15 and Mettl17 in intermediate steps links the distinct stages of small subunit assembly. The analysis suggests a model wherein Mettl17 acts as a platform for Mettl15 recruitment. Subsequent release of Mettl17 allows a conformational change of Mettl15 for substrate recognition. Upon methylation, Mettl15 adopts a loosely bound state which ultimately leads to its replacement by initiation factors, concluding the assembly. Together, our results indicate that assembly factors Mettl15 and Mettl17 cooperate to regulate the biogenesis process, and present a structural data resource for understanding molecular adaptations of assembly factors in mitoribosome.
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Preprint MeSH
The mitochondrial ribosome (mitoribosome) has diverged drastically from its evolutionary progenitor, the bacterial ribosome. Structural and compositional diversity is particularly striking in the phylum Euglenozoa, with an extraordinary protein gain in the mitoribosome of kinetoplastid protists. Here we report an even more complex mitoribosome in diplonemids, the sister-group of kinetoplastids. Affinity pulldown of mitoribosomal complexes from Diplonema papillatum, the diplonemid type species, demonstrates that they have a mass of > 5 MDa, contain as many as 130 integral proteins, and exhibit a protein-to-RNA ratio of 11:1. This unusual composition reflects unprecedented structural reduction of ribosomal RNAs, increased size of canonical mitoribosomal proteins, and accretion of three dozen lineage-specific components. In addition, we identified >50 candidate assembly factors, around half of which contribute to early mitoribosome maturation steps. Because little is known about early assembly stages even in model organisms, our investigation of the diplonemid mitoribosome illuminates this process. Together, our results provide a foundation for understanding how runaway evolutionary divergence shapes both biogenesis and function of a complex molecular machine.
- MeSH
- Euglenozoa * classification cytology genetics MeSH
- Eukaryota cytology genetics MeSH
- Mitochondrial Ribosomes * metabolism MeSH
- Ribosomal Proteins metabolism MeSH
- RNA, Ribosomal metabolism MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Ribosomal Proteins MeSH
- RNA, Ribosomal MeSH