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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Aug 17.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39149346

RÉSUMÉ

Mitochondrial genome expression is important for cellular bioenergetics. How mitochondrial RNA processing and translation are spatially organized across dynamic mitochondrial networks is not well understood. Here, we report that processed mitochondrial RNAs are consolidated with mitoribosome components into translation hubs distal to either nucleoids or processing granules in human cells. During stress, these hubs are remodeled into translationally repressed mesoscale bodies containing messenger, ribosomal, and double-stranded RNA. We show that the highly conserved helicase SUV3 contributes to the distribution of processed RNA within mitochondrial networks, and that stress bodies form downstream of proteostatic stress in cells lacking SUV3 unwinding activity. We propose that the spatial organization of nascent chain synthesis into discrete domains serves to throttle the flow of genetic information in stress to ensure mitochondrial quality control.

2.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2615: 99-106, 2023.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36807787

RÉSUMÉ

Metabolic labeling with the nucleoside analog 5-ethynyl-2'-deoxyuridine (EdU) enables the selective labeling of DNA synthesis in live cells. Newly synthesized EdU-containing DNA can be covalently modified after extraction or in fixed cells using copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition "click chemistry" reactions, enabling bioconjugation to various substrates including fluorophores for imaging studies. While often used to study nuclear DNA replication, EdU labeling can also be leveraged to detect the synthesis of organellar DNA in the cytoplasm of Eukaryotic cells. In this chapter, we outline methods for the application of EdU labeling to the study of mitochondrial genome synthesis in fixed cultured human cells, using fluorescent labeling and superresolution light microscopy.


Sujet(s)
Réplication de l'ADN , Désoxyuridine , Humains , Nucléosides , Microscopie de fluorescence , ADN mitochondrial
3.
J Cell Biol ; 220(6)2021 06 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33830170

RÉSUMÉ

The S9.6 antibody is broadly used to detect RNA:DNA hybrids but has significant affinity for double-stranded RNA. The impact of this off-target RNA binding activity has not been thoroughly investigated, especially in the context of immunofluorescence microscopy. We report that S9.6 immunofluorescence signal observed in fixed human cells arises predominantly from ribosomal RNA, not RNA:DNA hybrids. S9.6 staining was unchanged by pretreatment with the RNA:DNA hybrid-specific nuclease RNase H1, despite verification in situ that S9.6 recognized RNA:DNA hybrids and that RNase H1 was active. S9.6 staining was, however, significantly sensitive to RNase T1, which specifically degrades RNA. Additional imaging and biochemical data indicate that the prominent cytoplasmic and nucleolar S9.6 signal primarily derives from ribosomal RNA. Importantly, genome-wide maps obtained by DNA sequencing after S9.6-mediated DNA:RNA immunoprecipitation (DRIP) are RNase H1 sensitive and RNase T1 insensitive. Altogether, these data demonstrate that imaging using S9.6 is subject to pervasive artifacts without pretreatments and controls that mitigate its promiscuous recognition of cellular RNAs.


Sujet(s)
Anticorps monoclonaux/métabolisme , ADN/métabolisme , Hétéroduplexes d'acides nucléiques/métabolisme , ARN/métabolisme , Ribonuclease H/métabolisme , Anticorps monoclonaux/composition chimique , Affinité des anticorps , Artéfacts , ADN/composition chimique , Humains , Hétéroduplexes d'acides nucléiques/composition chimique , ARN/composition chimique , Ribonuclease H/composition chimique
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