The cytochrome b carboxyl terminal region is necessary for mitochondrial complex III assembly

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Abstract

Mitochondrial bc1 complex from yeast has 10 subunits, but only cytochrome b (Cytb) subunit is encoded in the mitochondrial genome. Cytb has eight transmembrane helices containing two hemes b for electron transfer. Cbp3 and Cbp6 assist Cytb synthesis, and together with Cbp4 induce Cytb hemylation. Subunits Qcr7/Qcr8 participate in the first steps of assembly, and lack of Qcr7 reduces Cytb synthesis through an assembly-feedback mechanism involving Cbp3/Cbp6. Because Qcr7 resides near the Cytb carboxyl region, we wondered whether this region is important for Cytb synthesis/assembly. Although deletion of the Cytb C-region did not abrogate Cytb synthesis, the assemblyfeedback regulation was lost, so Cytb synthesis was normal even if Qcr7 was missing. Mutants lacking the Cytb C-terminus were non-respiratory because of the absence of fully assembled bc1 complex. By performing complexome profiling, we showed the existence of aberrant early-stage subassemblies in the mutant. In this work, we demonstrate that the C-terminal region of Cytb is critical for regulation of Cytb synthesis and bc1 complex assembly.

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Flores-Mireles, D., Camacho-Villasana, Y., Lutikurti, M., García-Guerrero, A. E., Lozano-Rosas, G., Chagoya, V., … Pérez-Martínez, X. (2023). The cytochrome b carboxyl terminal region is necessary for mitochondrial complex III assembly. Life Science Alliance, 6(7). https://doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202201858

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