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1.
iScience ; 26(12): 108546, 2023 Dec 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38089582

RESUMO

Environmental variation selects for the adaptive plasticity of maternal provisioning. Even though developing honeybees find themselves in a protected colony environment, their reproductively specialized queens actively adjust their maternal investment, even among worker-destined eggs. However, the potentially adaptive consequences of this flexible provisioning strategy and their mechanistic basis are unknown. Under natural conditions, we find that the body size of larvae hatching from small eggs in large colonies converges with that of initially larger larvae hatching from large eggs typically produced in small colonies. However, large eggs confer a persistent body size advantage when small and large eggs are cross-fostered in small and large colonies, respectively. We substantiate the increased maternal investment by identifying growth-promoting metabolomes and proteomes in large eggs compared to small eggs, which are primarily enriched in amino acid metabolism and cell maturation. Thus, our study provides a comprehensive adaptive explanation for the worker egg size plasticity of honeybees.

2.
Elife ; 112022 11 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36346221

RESUMO

Reproduction involves the investment of resources into offspring. Although variation in reproductive effort often affects the number of offspring, adjustments of propagule size are also found in numerous species, including the Western honey bee, Apis mellifera. However, the proximate causes of these adjustments are insufficiently understood, especially in oviparous species with complex social organization in which adaptive evolution is shaped by kin selection. Here, we show in a series of experiments that queens predictably and reversibly increase egg size in small colonies and decrease egg size in large colonies, while their ovary size changes in the opposite direction. Additional results suggest that these effects cannot be solely explained by egg-laying rate and are due to the queens' perception of colony size. Egg-size plasticity is associated with quantitative changes of 290 ovarian proteins, most of which relate to energy metabolism, protein transport, and cytoskeleton. Based on functional and network analyses, we further study the small GTPase Rho1 as a candidate regulator of egg size. Spatio-temporal expression analysis via RNAscope and qPCR supports an important role of Rho1 in egg-size determination, and subsequent RNAi-mediated gene knockdown confirmed that Rho1 has a major effect on egg size in honey bees. These results elucidate how the social environment of the honey bee colony may be translated into a specific cellular process to adjust maternal investment into eggs. It remains to be studied how widespread this mechanism is and whether it has consequences for population dynamics and epigenetic influences on offspring phenotype in honey bees and other species.


Honey bees are social insects that live in large colonies containing tens of thousands of individuals. The vast majority of bees are sterile females known as worker bees. They perform most of the activities essential for the survival of the colony, including foraging for pollen and nectar and taking care of eggs and larvae. An individual known as the queen bee is the mother of the colony and is normally the only female who reproduces. She has two massive ovaries and can produce up to two thousand eggs per day. Previous studies indicate that the number and size of the eggs vary according to the conditions inside the colony and in the surrounding environment. Larger eggs contain more nutrients so the resulting embryos may have a better chance of survival. However, producing bigger eggs requires the queen to invest more resources, which is costly to the colony as a whole. It remains unclear which mechanisms regulate the size of honey bee eggs. To address this question, Han, Wei, Amiri et al. carried out a series of experiments on the Western honey bee, Apis mellifera. The experiments showed that queen bees in small colonies had smaller ovaries and produced bigger eggs than those in large colonies. The difference in egg size appeared to be due to the queen bee's perception of the size of the colony, rather than its actual size. An approach called proteomics revealed that 290 ovarian proteins were produced at different levels in big-egg producing ovaries compared to small-egg producing ovaries. Further experiments suggested that a protein known as Rho1 regulates the size of the eggs the queen bees produce. These findings provide an explanation for how the social environment of the Western honey bee colony may influence the queen bee's reproductive investment at the molecular level. Further studies to confirm and expand on this work may help to improve honey bee health and also contribute to our general understanding of this life stage in bees and other insects.


Assuntos
Oviposição , Reprodução , Feminino , Abelhas , Animais , Ovário , Ovos
3.
J Insect Sci ; 22(1)2022 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35137136

RESUMO

The effects of honey bee management, such as intensive migratory beekeeping, are part of the ongoing debate concerning causes of colony health problems. Even though comparisons of disease and pathogen loads among differently managed colonies indicate some effects, the direct impact of migratory practices on honey bee pathogens is poorly understood. To test long- and short-term impacts of managed migration on pathogen loads and immunity, experimental honey bee colonies were maintained with or without migratory movement. Individuals that experienced migration as juveniles (e.g., larval and pupal development), as adults, or both were compared to control colonies that remained stationary and therefore did not experience migratory relocation. Samples at different ages and life-history stages (hive bees or foragers), taken at the beginning and end of the active season, were analyzed for pathogen loads and physiological markers of health. Bees exposed to migratory management during adulthood had increased levels of the AKI virus complex (Acute bee paralysis, Kashmir bee, and Israeli acute bee paralysis viruses) and decreased levels of antiviral gene expression (dicer-like). However, those in stationary management as adults had elevated gut parasites (i.e. trypanosomes). Effects of environment during juvenile development were more complex and interacted with life-history stage and season. Age at collection, life-history stage, and season all influenced numerous factors from viral load to immune gene expression. Although the factors that we examined are not independent, the results illuminate potential factors in both migratory and nonmigratory beekeeping that are likely to contribute to colony stress, and also indicate potential mitigation measures.


Assuntos
Criação de Abelhas/métodos , Abelhas , Estações do Ano , Animais , Abelhas/genética , Abelhas/imunologia , Abelhas/virologia , Expressão Gênica
4.
Front Genet ; 11: 566320, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33101388

RESUMO

Honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) suffer from many brood pathogens, including viruses. Despite considerable research, the molecular responses and dynamics of honey bee pupae to viral pathogens remain poorly understood. Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus (IAPV) is emerging as a model virus since its association with severe colony losses. Using worker pupae, we studied the transcriptomic and methylomic consequences of IAPV infection over three distinct time points after inoculation. Contrasts of gene expression and 5 mC DNA methylation profiles between IAPV-infected and control individuals at these time points - corresponding to the pre-replicative (5 h), replicative (20 h), and terminal (48 h) phase of infection - indicate that profound immune responses and distinct manipulation of host molecular processes accompany the lethal progression of this virus. We identify the temporal dynamics of the transcriptomic response to with more genes differentially expressed in the replicative and terminal phases than in the pre-replicative phase. However, the number of differentially methylated regions decreased dramatically from the pre-replicative to the replicative and terminal phase. Several cellular pathways experienced hyper- and hypo-methylation in the pre-replicative phase and later dramatically increased in gene expression at the terminal phase, including the MAPK, Jak-STAT, Hippo, mTOR, TGF-beta signaling pathways, ubiquitin mediated proteolysis, and spliceosome. These affected biological functions suggest that adaptive host responses to combat the virus are mixed with viral manipulations of the host to increase its own reproduction, all of which are involved in anti-viral immune response, cell growth, and proliferation. Comparative genomic analyses with other studies of viral infections of honey bees and fruit flies indicated that similar immune pathways are shared. Our results further suggest that dynamic DNA methylation responds to viral infections quickly, regulating subsequent gene activities. Our study provides new insights of molecular mechanisms involved in epigenetic that can serve as foundation for the long-term goal to develop anti-viral strategies for honey bees, the most important commercial pollinator.

5.
Infect Genet Evol ; 85: 104558, 2020 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32947033

RESUMO

Trans-generational disease effects include vertical pathogen transmission but also immune priming to enhance offspring immunity. Accordingly, the survival consequences of maternal virus infection can vary and its molecular consequences during early development are poorly understood. The honey bee queen is long-lived and represents the central hub for vertical virus transmission as the sole reproductive individual in her colony. Even though virus symptoms in queens are mild, viral infection may have severe consequences for the offspring. Thus, transcriptome patterns during early developmental are predicted to respond to maternal virus infection. To test this hypothesis, gene expression patterns were compared among pooled honey bee eggs laid by queens that were either infected with Deformed wing virus (DWV1), Sacbrood virus (SBV2), both viruses (DWV and SBV), or no virus. Whole transcriptome analyses revealed significant expression differences of a few genes, some of which have hitherto no known function. Despite the paucity of single gene effects, functional enrichment analyses revealed numerous biological processes in the embryos to be affected by virus infection. Effects on several regulatory pathways were consistent with maternal responses to virus infection and correlated with responses to DWV and SBV in honey bee larvae and pupae. Overall, effects on egg transcriptome patterns were specific to each virus and the results of dual-infection samples suggested synergistic effects of DWV and SBV. We interpret our results as consequences of maternal infections. Thus, this first study to document and characterize virus-associated changes in the transcriptome of honey bee eggs represents an important contribution to understanding trans-generational virus effects, although more in-depth studies are needed to understand the detailed mechanisms of how viruses affect honey bee embryos.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Animais/genética , Doenças dos Animais/virologia , Abelhas/virologia , Transcriptoma , Viroses/veterinária , Animais , Feminino , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Vírus de RNA
6.
Viruses ; 12(3)2020 03 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32192060

RESUMO

The honey bee queen is the central hub of a colony to produce eggs and release pheromones to maintain social cohesion. Among many environmental stresses, viruses are a major concern to compromise the queen's health and reproductive vigor. Viruses have evolved numerous strategies to infect queens either via vertical transmission from the queens' parents or horizontally through the worker and drones with which she is in contact during development, while mating, and in the reproductive period in the colony. Over 30 viruses have been discovered from honey bees but only few studies exist on the pathogenicity and direct impact of viruses on the queen's phenotype. An apparent lack of virus symptoms and practical problems are partly to blame for the lack of studies, and we hope to stimulate new research and methodological approaches. To illustrate the problems, we describe a study on sublethal effects of Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus (IAPV) that led to inconclusive results. We conclude by discussing the most crucial methodological considerations and novel approaches for studying the interactions between honey bee viruses and their interactions with queen health.


Assuntos
Abelhas/virologia , Viroses/veterinária , Animais , Abelhas/genética , Abelhas/imunologia , Comportamento Animal , Dicistroviridae , Feminino , Vírus de Insetos , Reprodução , Viroses/imunologia , Viroses/transmissão
7.
J Evol Biol ; 33(4): 534-543, 2020 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31961025

RESUMO

Social evolution has led to distinct life-history patterns in social insects, but many colony-level and individual traits, such as egg size, are not sufficiently understood. Thus, a series of experiments was performed to study the effects of genotypes, colony size and colony nutrition on variation in egg size produced by honey bee (Apis mellifera) queens. Queens from different genetic stocks produced significantly different egg sizes under similar environmental conditions, indicating standing genetic variation for egg size that allows for adaptive evolutionary change. Further investigations revealed that eggs produced by queens in large colonies were consistently smaller than eggs produced in small colonies, and queens dynamically adjusted egg size in relation to colony size. Similarly, queens increased egg size in response to food deprivation. These results could not be solely explained by different numbers of eggs produced in the different circumstances but instead seem to reflect an active adjustment of resource allocation by the queen in response to colony conditions. As a result, larger eggs experienced higher subsequent survival than smaller eggs, suggesting that honey bee queens might increase egg size under unfavourable conditions to enhance brood survival and to minimize costly brood care of eggs that fail to successfully develop, and thus conserve energy at the colony level. The extensive plasticity and genetic variation of egg size in honey bees has important implications for understanding life-history evolution in a social context and implies this neglected life-history stage in honey bees may have trans-generational effects.


Assuntos
Adaptação Fisiológica , Abelhas , Óvulo , Animais , Feminino , Variação Genética
8.
Insects ; 10(1)2019 Jan 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30626038

RESUMO

Queen loss or failure is an important cause of honey bee colony loss. A functional queen is essential to a colony, and the queen is predicted to be well protected by worker bees and other mechanisms of social immunity. Nevertheless, several honey bee pathogens (including viruses) can infect queens. Here, we report a series of experiments to test how virus infection influences queen⁻worker interactions and the consequences for virus transmission. We used Israeli acute paralysis virus (IAPV) as an experimental pathogen because it is relevant to bee health but is not omnipresent. Queens were observed spending 50% of their time with healthy workers, 32% with infected workers, and 18% without interaction. However, the overall bias toward healthy workers was not statistically significant, and there was considerable individual to individual variability. We found that physical contact between infected workers and queens leads to high queen infection in some cases, suggesting that IAPV infections also spread through close bodily contact. Across experiments, queens exhibited lower IAPV titers than surrounding workers. Thus, our results indicate that honey bee queens are better protected by individual and social immunity, but this protection is insufficient to prevent IAPV infections completely.

9.
PLoS One ; 13(3): e0195283, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29596509

RESUMO

Deformed wing virus (DWV) is an important pathogen in a broad range of insects, including honey bees. Concordant with the spread of Varroa, DWV is present in the majority of honey bee colonies and can result in either low-level infections with asymptomatic bees that nonetheless exhibit increased colony loss under stress, or high-level infections with acute effects on bee health and viability. DWV can be transmitted vertically or horizontally and evidence suggests that horizontal transmission via Varroa is associated with acute symptomatic infections. Vertical transmission also occurs and is presumably important for the maintenance of DWV in honey bee populations. To further our understanding the vertical transmission of DWV through queens, we performed three experiments: we studied the quantitative effectiveness of vertical transmission, surveyed the prevalence of successful egg infection under commercial conditions, and distinguished among three possible mechanisms of transmission. We find that queen-infection level predicts the DWV titers in their eggs, although the transmission is not very efficient. Our quantitative assessment of DWV demonstrates that eggs in 1/3 of the colonies are infected with DWV and highly infected eggs are rare in newly-installed spring colonies. Additionally, our results indicate that DWV transmission occurs predominantly by virus adhering to the surface of eggs (transovum) rather than intracellularly. Our combined results suggest that the queens' DWV vectoring capacity in practice is not as high as its theoretical potential. Thus, DWV transmission by honey bee queens is part of the DWV epidemic with relevant practical implications, which should be further studied.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Animais/transmissão , Abelhas/virologia , Ovos/virologia , Transmissão Vertical de Doenças Infecciosas , Vírus de RNA/patogenicidade , Animais
10.
Insects ; 8(2)2017 May 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28481294

RESUMO

Western honey bees, Apis mellifera, live in highly eusocial colonies that are each typically headed by a single queen. The queen is the sole reproductive female in a healthy colony, and because long-term colony survival depends on her ability to produce a large number of offspring, queen health is essential for colony success. Honey bees have recently been experiencing considerable declines in colony health. Among a number of biotic and abiotic factors known to impact colony health, disease and queen failure are repeatedly reported as important factors underlying colony losses. Surprisingly, there are relatively few studies on the relationship and interaction between honey bee diseases and queen quality. It is critical to understand the negative impacts of pests and pathogens on queen health, how queen problems might enable disease, and how both factors influence colony health. Here, we review the current literature on queen reproductive potential and the impacts of honey bee parasites and pathogens on queens. We conclude by highlighting gaps in our knowledge on the combination of disease and queen failure to provide a perspective and prioritize further research to mitigate disease, improve queen quality, and ensure colony health.

11.
Sci Rep ; 6: 32023, 2016 08 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27554200

RESUMO

Most pollination in large-scale agriculture is dependent on managed colonies of a single species, the honey bee Apis mellifera. More than 1 million hives are transported to California each year just to pollinate the almonds, and bees are trucked across the country for various cropping systems. Concerns have been raised about whether such "migratory management" causes bees undue stress; however to date there have been no longer-term studies rigorously addressing whether migratory management is detrimental to bee health. To address this issue, we conducted field experiments comparing bees from commercial and experimental migratory beekeeping operations to those from stationary colonies to quantify effects on lifespan, colony health and productivity, and levels of oxidative damage for individual bees. We detected a significant decrease in lifespan of migratory adult bees relative to stationary bees. We also found that migration affected oxidative stress levels in honey bees, but that food scarcity had an even larger impact; some detrimental effects of migration may be alleviated by a greater abundance of forage. In addition, rearing conditions affect levels of oxidative damage incurred as adults. This is the first comprehensive study on impacts of migratory management on the health and oxidative stress of honey bees.


Assuntos
Agricultura/métodos , Abelhas/fisiologia , Fatores Etários , Animais , California , Maine , Malondialdeído/análise , Malondialdeído/metabolismo , North Carolina , Estresse Oxidativo
12.
Exp Gerontol ; 83: 15-21, 2016 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27422326

RESUMO

Oxidative stress can lead to premature aging symptoms and cause acute mortality at higher doses in a range of organisms. Oxidative stress resistance and longevity are mechanistically and phenotypically linked; considerable variation in oxidative stress resistance exists among and within species and typically covaries with life expectancy. However, it is unclear whether stress-resistant, long-lived individuals avoid, repair, or tolerate molecular damage to survive longer than others. The honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) is an emerging model system that is well-suited to address this question. Furthermore, this species is the most economically important pollinator, whose health may be compromised by pesticide exposure, including oxidative stressors. Here, we develop a protocol for inducing oxidative stress in honey bee males (drones) via Paraquat injection. After injection, individuals from different colony sources were kept in common social conditions to monitor their survival compared to saline-injected controls. Oxidative stress was measured in susceptible and resistant individuals. Paraquat drastically reduced survival but individuals varied in their resistance to treatment within and among colony sources. Longer-lived individuals exhibited higher levels of lipid peroxidation than individuals dying early. In contrast, the level of protein carbonylation was not significantly different between the two groups. This first study of oxidative stress in male honey bees suggests that survival of an acute oxidative stressor is due to tolerance, not prevention or repair, of oxidative damage to lipids. It also demonstrates colony differences in oxidative stress resistance that might be useful for breeding stress-resistant honey bees.


Assuntos
Abelhas/fisiologia , Peroxidação de Lipídeos , Longevidade , Estresse Oxidativo , Animais , Abelhas/efeitos dos fármacos , Masculino , Paraquat/efeitos adversos
13.
Mitochondrion ; 9(3): 211-21, 2009 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19254780

RESUMO

Yeast cells lacking the mitochondrial NADH kinase encoded by POS5 display increased sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide, a slow-growth phenotype, reduced mitochondrial function and increased levels of mitochondrial protein oxidation and mtDNA mutations. Here we examined gene expression in pos5Delta cells, comparing these data to those from cells containing deletions of superoxide dismutase-encoding genes SOD1 or SOD2. Surprisingly, stress-response genes were down-regulated in pos5Delta, sod1Delta and sod2Delta cells, implying that cells infer stress levels from mitochondrial activity rather than sensing reactive oxygen species directly. Additionally, pos5Delta, but not sod1 or sod2, cells displayed an anaerobic expression profile, indicating a defect in oxygen sensing that is specific to pos5, and is not a general stress-response. Finally, the pos5Delta expression profile is quite similar to the hap1Delta expression profile previously reported, which may indicate a shared mechanism.


Assuntos
Deleção de Genes , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Proteínas Mitocondriais/deficiência , Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool)/deficiência , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Antifúngicos/toxicidade , Regulação para Baixo , Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica , Peróxido de Hidrogênio/toxicidade , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/efeitos dos fármacos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Superóxido Dismutase/genética , Superóxido Dismutase-1 , Regulação para Cima
14.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 37(7): e54, 2009 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19273534

RESUMO

Cytoscape is a bioinformatic data analysis and visualization platform that is well-suited to the analysis of gene expression data. To facilitate the analysis of yeast microarray data using Cytoscape, we constructed an interaction network (interactome) using the curated interaction data available from the Saccharomyces Genome Database (www.yeastgenome.org) and the database of yeast transcription factors at YEASTRACT (www.yeastract.com). These data were formatted and imported into Cytoscape using semi-automated methods, including Linux-based scripts, that simplified the process while minimizing the introduction of processing errors. The methods described for the construction of this yeast interactome are generally applicable to the construction of any interactome. Using Cytoscape, we illustrate the use of this interactome through the analysis of expression data from a recent yeast diauxic shift experiment. We also report and briefly describe the complex associations among transcription factors that result in the regulation of thousands of genes through coordinated changes in expression of dozens of transcription factors. These cells are thus able to sensitively regulate cellular metabolism in response to changes in genetic or environmental conditions through relatively small changes in the expression of large numbers of genes, affecting the entire yeast metabolome.


Assuntos
Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Glicerol/farmacologia , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/efeitos dos fármacos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Software , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo
15.
Mitochondrion ; 6(2): 94-101, 2006 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16621727

RESUMO

Disruption of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial NADH kinase POS5 increases the mitochondrial mutation rate 50-fold. Whereas most multicellular eukaryotic genomes have one NADH kinase gene, the yeast genome contains three distinct genes encoding NAD/H kinase activity. To determine if all three genes are essential for viability we constructed combinations of gene knockouts. We show that only the pos5Deltautr1Delta combination is synthetically lethal, demonstrating an essential overlapping function, and showing that NAD/H kinase activity is essential for eukaryotic viability. The single human NAD/H kinase gene can rescue the lethality of the double knockout in yeast, demonstrating that the single human gene can fill the various functions provided by the three yeast genes. The human NAD/H kinase gene harbors very common sequence variants, but all of these equally complement the synthetic lethality in yeast, illustrating that each of these are functionally wild-type. To understand the molecular mechanism of the mitochondrial genome instability of pos5 mutation we performed gene expression analysis on the pos5Delta. The pos5Delta resulted in an increase in expression of most of the iron transport genes including key genes involved in iron-sulfur cluster assembly. Decreased expression occurred in many genes involved in the electron transport chain. We show that the pos5Delta expression pattern is similar to the frataxin homolog knockout (yfh1Delta), the yeast model for Friedreich's ataxia. These combined data show that the POS5 NAD/H kinase is an important protein required for a variety of essential cellular pathways and that deficient iron-sulfur cluster assembly may play a critical role in the mitochondrial mutator phenotype observed in the pos5Delta.


Assuntos
Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Genes Fúngicos , Mitocôndrias/enzimologia , Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool)/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzimologia , Mitocôndrias/genética , Proteínas Mitocondriais , Mutação , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética
16.
Hum Mol Genet ; 15(2): 363-74, 2006 Jan 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16368709

RESUMO

A number of nuclear mutations have been identified in a variety of mitochondrial diseases including progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO), Alpers syndrome and other neuromuscular and oxidative phosphorylation defects. More than 50 mutations have been identified in POLG, which encodes the human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) polymerase gamma, PEO and Alpers patients. To rapidly characterize the effects of these mutations, we have developed a versatile system that enables the consequences of homologous mutations, introduced in situ into the yeast mtDNA polymerase gene MIP1, to be evaluated in vivo in haploid and diploid cells. Overall, distinct phenotypes for expression of each of the mip1-PEO mutations were observed, including respiration-defective cells with decreased viability, dominant-negative mutant polymerases, elevated levels of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA damage and chromosomal mutations. Mutations in the polymerase domain caused the most severe phenotype accompanied by loss of mtDNA and cell viability, whereas the mutation in the exonuclease domain showed mild dominance with loss of mtDNA. Interestingly, the linker region mutation caused elevated mitochondrial and nuclear DNA damage. The cellular processes contributing to these observations in the mutant yeast cells are potentially relevant to understanding the pathologies observed in human mitochondrial disease patients.


Assuntos
DNA Polimerase I/genética , DNA Polimerase Dirigida por DNA/genética , Mutação/genética , Oftalmoplegia Externa Progressiva Crônica/genética , Fenótipo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Sequência de Bases , Sobrevivência Celular/genética , Dano ao DNA/genética , DNA Polimerase gama , DNA Mitocondrial/genética , DNA Polimerase Dirigida por DNA/metabolismo , Componentes do Gene , Técnicas de Transferência de Genes , Humanos , Microscopia Confocal , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA
17.
Eukaryot Cell ; 2(4): 809-20, 2003 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12912900

RESUMO

In a search for nuclear genes that affect mutagenesis of mitochondrial DNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, an ATP-NAD (NADH) kinase, encoded by POS5, that functions exclusively in mitochondria was identified. The POS5 gene product was overproduced in Escherichia coli and purified without a mitochondrial targeting sequence. A direct biochemical assay demonstrated that the POS5 gene product utilizes ATP to phosphorylate both NADH and NAD(+), with a twofold preference for NADH. Disruption of POS5 increased minus-one frameshift mutations in mitochondrial DNA 50-fold, as measured by the arg8(m) reversion assay, with no increase in nuclear mutations. Also, a dramatic increase in petite colony formation and slow growth on glycerol or limited glucose were observed. POS5 was previously described as a gene required for resistance to hydrogen peroxide. Consistent with a role in the mitochondrial response to oxidative stress, a pos5 deletion exhibited a 28-fold increase in oxidative damage to mitochondrial proteins and hypersensitivity to exogenous copper. Furthermore, disruption of POS5 induced mitochondrial biogenesis as a response to mitochondrial dysfunction. Thus, the POS5 NADH kinase is required for mitochondrial DNA stability with a critical role in detoxification of reactive oxygen species. These results predict a role for NADH kinase in human mitochondrial diseases.


Assuntos
DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Mitocôndrias/enzimologia , Mitocôndrias/genética , Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool)/fisiologia , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/fisiologia , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzimologia , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Células Cultivadas , Cobre/farmacologia , Metabolismo Energético/genética , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Escherichia coli/genética , Doenças Mitocondriais/enzimologia , Doenças Mitocondriais/genética , Proteínas Mitocondriais , Mutação/genética , NAD , Estresse Oxidativo/genética , Fosforilação , Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool)/genética , Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool)/isolamento & purificação , Espécies Reativas de Oxigênio/metabolismo , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/isolamento & purificação
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