4.8 Article

Structures of Tetrahymena's respiratory chain reveal the diversity of eukaryotic core metabolism

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 376, Issue 6595, Pages 831-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abn7747

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Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R35GM137929]
  2. Zhejiang University School of Medicine [ZJU100]

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This study reveals the functional and structural diversity of eukaryotic respiration through investigating the respiratory chain of the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila. It expands our understanding of core metabolism by identifying divergence in key components of eukaryotic respiration.
Respiration is a core biological energy-converting process whose last steps are carried out by a chain of multisubunit complexes in the inner mitochondrial membrane. To probe the functional and structural diversity of eukaryotic respiration, we examined the respiratory chain of the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila (Tt). Using cryo-electron microscopy on a mixed sample, we solved structures of a supercomplex between Tt complex I (Tt-CI) and Tt-CIII2 (Tt-SC I+III2) and a structure of Tt-CIV2. Tt-SC I+III2 (similar to 2.3 megadaltons) is a curved assembly with structural and functional symmetry breaking. Tt-CIV2 is a similar to 2.7-megadalton dimer with more than 50 subunits per protomer, including mitochondrial carriers and a TIM8(3)-TIM13(3)-like domain. Our structural and functional study of the T. thermophila respiratory chain reveals divergence in key components of eukaryotic respiration, thereby expanding our understanding of core metabolism.

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