The mitochondrion is often referred as the cellular powerhouse because the organelle oxidizes organic acids and NADH derived from nutriments, converting around 40% of the Gibbs free energy change of these reactions into ATP, the major energy currency of cell metabolism. Mitochondria are thus microscopic furnaces that inevitably release heat as a by-product of these reactions, and this contributes to body warming, especially in endotherms like birds and mammals. Over the last decade, the idea has emerged that mitochondria could be warmer than the cytosol, because of their intense energy metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo address the frequency of complex V defects, we systematically sequenced MT-ATP6/8 genes in 512 consecutive patients. We performed functional analysis in muscle or fibroblasts for 12 out of 27 putative homoplasmic mutations and in cybrids for four. Fibroblasts, muscle and cybrids with known deleterious mutations underwent parallel analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
April 2020
Mitochondria metabolize almost all the oxygen that we consume, reducing it to water by cytochrome oxidase (CO). CO maximizes energy capture into the protonmotive force by pumping protons across the mitochondrial inner membrane. Forty years after the H/e stoichiometry was established, a consensus has yet to be reached on the route taken by pumped protons to traverse CO's hydrophobic core and on whether bacterial and mitochondrial COs operate via the same coupling mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: ATP synthase, the mitochondrial complex V, plays a major role in bioenergetics and its defects lead to severe diseases. Lack of a consensual protocol for the assay of complex V activity probably explains the under-representation of complex V defect among mitochondrial diseases. The aim of this work was to elaborate a fast, simple and reliable method to check the maximal complex V capacity in samples relevant to clinical diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mitochondrial ATPase inhibitor, IF1, regulates the activity of the mitochondrial ATP synthase. The oligomeric state of IF1 related to pH is crucial for its inhibitory activity. Although extensive structural studies have been performed to characterize the oligomeric states of bovine IF1, only little is known concerning those of yeast IF1.
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