CO2-sensitive tRNA modification associated with human mitochondrial disease

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Abstract

It has been generally thought that tRNA modifications are stable and static, and their frequencies are rarely regulated. N 6-Threonylcarbamoyladenosine (t6A) occurs at position 37 of five mitochondrial (mt-)tRNA species. We show that YRDC and OSGEPL1 are responsible for t6A37 formation, utilizing L-Threonine, ATP, and CO2/bicarbonate as substrates. OSGE P L1-knockout cells exhibit respiratory defects and reduced mitochondrial translation. We find low level of t6A37 in mutant mt-TRNA isolated from the MERRF-like patient's cells, indicating that lack of t6A37 results in pathological consequences. Kinetic measurements of t6A37 formation reveal that the Km value of CO2/bicarbonate is extremely high (31 mM), suggesting that CO2/bicarbonate is a rate-limiting factor for t6A37 formation. Consistent with this, we observe a low frequency of t6A37 in mt-TRNAs isolated from human cells cultured without bicarbonate. These findings indicate that t6A37 is regulated by sensing intracellular CO2/bicarbonate concentration, implying that mitochondrial translation is modulated in a codon-specific manner under physiological conditions.

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Lin, H., Miyauchi, K., Harada, T., Okita, R., Takeshita, E., Komaki, H., … Suzuki, T. (2018). CO2-sensitive tRNA modification associated with human mitochondrial disease. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-04250-4

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