Medical College of Wisconsin
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Brain cytochrome oxidase subunit complementary DNAs: isolation, subcloning, sequencing, light and electron microscopic in situ hybridization of transcripts, and regulation by neuronal activity. Neuroscience 1997 Feb;76(4):1035-55

Date

02/01/1997

Pubmed ID

9027865

DOI

10.1016/s0306-4522(96)00410-1

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0031013521 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   36 Citations

Abstract

The goal of the present study was to isolate, for the first time, cytochrome oxidase subunit genes from murine brain complementary DNA library and to characterize the expression of these genes from mitochondrial and nuclear sources at both light and electron microscopic levels. Brain subunit III (mitochondrial) shared 100% identity with that of murine L cells. Subunit VIa (nuclear) was known to have tissue-specific isoforms in other species: the ubiquitous liver isoform and the heart/muscle isoform. Our brain subunit VIa shared 93% homology with that of the rat liver and 100% identity with the recently reported murine liver isoform, which is only 62% identical to that of the rat heart isoform. In situ hybridization with riboprobes revealed messenger RNA labelling that was similar, though not identical, to that of cytochrome oxidase histochemistry. Monocular enucleation in adult mice induced a significant down-regulation of both subunit messages in the contralateral lateral geniculate nucleus. However, the decrease in subunit III messenger RNAs surpassed that of subunit VIa at all time periods examined, suggesting that mitochondrial gene expression is more tightly regulated by neuronal activity than that of nuclear ones. At the electron microscopic level, subunit III messenger RNA was localized to the mitochondrial compartment in both cell bodies and processes, while that of nuclear-encoded subunit VIa was present exclusively in the extramitochondrial compartment of somata and not of dendrites or axons. Surprisingly, the message was primarily associated with the rough endoplasmic reticulum, suggesting a novel pathway for its synthesis and trafficking. Our results indicate that the unique properties of neurons impose special requirements for subunits of a single mitochondrial enzyme with dual genomic origins. At sites of high energy demands (such as postsynaptic dendrites and some axon terminals), mitochondrial-encoded cytochrome oxidase subunits can be locally transcribed and translated, and they provide the framework for the subsequent importation and incorporation of nuclear-encoded subunits, which are strictly synthesized in the cell bodies. Dynamic local energy needs are met when subunits from the two genomic sources are assembled to form functional holoenzymes.

Author List

Wong-Riley MT, Mullen MA, Huang Z, Guyer C



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Animals
Base Sequence
Blotting, Northern
Brain
Cloning, Molecular
DNA, Complementary
Densitometry
Electron Transport Complex IV
Electrophoresis, Agar Gel
In Situ Hybridization
Liver
Mice
Microscopy, Electron
Mitochondria
Molecular Sequence Data
Neurons
Rats
Transcription, Genetic