About: NDUFC2 is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 9 publications have been published within this topic receiving 253 citations. The topic is also known as: B14.5b & CI-B14.5b.
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of methyltransferase-like 3 (METTL3)-dependent N6-methyladenosine (m6A) methylation in affecting mitochondrial metabolism in monocytes under inflammation was identified.
TL;DR: It is shown that siRNA silencing of NDUFC2 reduced growth of human D-407 retinal pigment epithelial cells, significantly diminished mitochondrial membrane potential, and interfered with complex I integrity, and a genotype combination involving this amino acid and the mtDNA haplogroup HV likely altered susceptibility to type 2 diabetes mellitus in Ashkenazi Jews.
Abstract: The mutation rate of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), which is higher by an order of magnitude as compared with the nuclear genome, enforces tight mitonuclear coevolution to maintain mitochondrial activities. Interruption of such coevolution plays a role in interpopulation hybrid breakdown, speciation events, and disease susceptibility. Previously, we found an elevated amino acid replacement rate and positive selection in the nuclear DNA-encoded oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) complex I subunit NDUFC2, a phenomenon important for the direct interaction of NDUFC2 with the mtDNA-encoded complex I subunit ND4. This finding underlines the importance of mitonuclear coevolution to physical interactions between mtDNA and nuclear DNA-encoded factors. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether this interaction is important for the stability and activity of complex I. Here, we show that siRNA silencing of NDUFC2 reduced growth of human D-407 retinal pigment epithelial cells, significantly diminished mitochondrial membrane potential, and interfered with complex I integrity. Moreover, site-directed mutagenesis of a positively selected amino acid in NDUFC2 significantly interfered with the interaction of NDUFC2 with its mtDNA-encoded partner ND4. Finally, we show that a genotype combination involving this amino acid (NDUFC2 residue 46) and the mtDNA haplogroup HV likely altered susceptibility to type 2 diabetes mellitus in Ashkenazi Jews. Therefore, mitonuclear coevolution is important for maintaining mitonuclear factor interactions, OXPHOS, and for human health.
TL;DR: The phosphoproteome of bovine heart complex I of the respiratory chain has been analysed with a procedure based on nondenaturing gel electrophoretic separation of complex I from small quantities of mitochondria samples, in‐gel digestion, in combination with phosphopeptide enrichment by titanium dioxide and MS.
Abstract: The phosphoproteome of bovine heart complex I of the respiratory chain has been analysed with a procedure based on nondenaturing gel electrophoretic separation of complex I from small quantities of mitochondria samples, in-gel digestion, in combination with phosphopeptide enrichment by titanium dioxide and MS. The results, complemented by analyses of purified samples of complex I, showed phosphorylation of five subunits of the complex, 42 kDa (human gene NDUFA10), ESSS, B14.5a (human gene NDUFA7), B14.5b (human gene NDUFC2) and B16.6 (GRIM-19). MS also revealed the presence of phosphorylated programmed cell death protein 8(AIF) in native and purified samples of complex I analysed. The possible physiological relevance of these findings is discussed.
TL;DR: Three affected children from two unrelated families who presented with Leigh syndrome due to homozygous variants in NDUFC2 are described, revealing aberrant assembly intermediates suggestive of stalled biogenesis of the complex I holoenzyme and indicating a crucial role for ND UFC2 in the assembly of the membrane arm of complex I, particularly the ND2 module.
Abstract: Leigh syndrome is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder, most commonly observed in paediatric mitochondrial disease, and is often associated with pathogenic variants in complex I structural subunits or assembly factors resulting in isolated respiratory chain complex I deficiency. Clinical heterogeneity has been reported, but key diagnostic findings are developmental regression, elevated lactate and characteristic neuroimaging abnormalities. Here, we describe three affected children from two unrelated families who presented with Leigh syndrome due to homozygous variants (c.346_*7del and c.173A>T p.His58Leu) in NDUFC2, encoding a complex I subunit. Biochemical and functional investigation of subjects' fibroblasts confirmed a severe defect in complex I activity, subunit expression and assembly. Lentiviral transduction of subjects' fibroblasts with wild-type NDUFC2 cDNA increased complex I assembly supporting the association of the identified NDUFC2 variants with mitochondrial pathology. Complexome profiling confirmed a loss of NDUFC2 and defective complex I assembly, revealing aberrant assembly intermediates suggestive of stalled biogenesis of the complex I holoenzyme and indicating a crucial role for NDUFC2 in the assembly of the membrane arm of complex I, particularly the ND2 module.
TL;DR: A significant reduction of Ndufc2 expression causes complex I dysfunction and contributes to stroke susceptibility in SHRSP, and the current evidence may suggest that NduFC2 can contribute to an increased occurrence of early‐onset ischemic stroke in humans.
Abstract: Background The genetic basis of stroke susceptibility remains to be elucidated. STR1 quantitative trait locus (STR1/QTL) was identified on rat chromosome 1 of stroke‐prone spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHRSP) upon Japanese‐style stroke‐permissive diet (JD), and it contributes to 20% of the stroke phenotype variance.
Methods and Results Nine hundred eighty‐six probe sets mapping on STR1 were selected from the Rat RAE230A array and screened through a microarray differential expression analysis in brains of SHRSP and stroke‐resistant SHR (SHRSR) fed with either regular diet or JD. The gene encoding Ndufc2 (NADH dehydrogenase [ubiquinone] 1 subunit), mapping 8 Mb apart from STR1/QTL Lod score peak, was found significantly down‐regulated under JD in SHRSP compared to SHRSR. Ndufc2 disruption altered complex I assembly and activity, reduced mitochondrial membrane potential and ATP levels, and increased reactive oxygen species production and inflammation both in vitro and in vivo. SHRSR carrying heterozygous Ndufc2 deletion showed renal abnormalities and stroke occurrence under JD, similarly to SHRSP. In humans, T allele variant at NDUFC2/rs11237379 was associated with significant reduction in gene expression and with increased occurrence of early‐onset ischemic stroke by recessive mode of transmission (odds ratio [OR], 1.39; CI, 1.07–1.80; P =0.012). Subjects carrying TT/rs11237379 and A allele variant at NDUFC2/rs641836 had further increased risk of stroke (OR=1.56; CI, 1.14–2.13; P =0.006).
Conclusions A significant reduction of Ndufc2 expression causes complex I dysfunction and contributes to stroke susceptibility in SHRSP. Moreover, our current evidence may suggest that Ndufc2 can contribute to an increased occurrence of early‐onset ischemic stroke in humans.