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Dive into the research topics where Alexandre Smirnov is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandre Smirnov.


Genes & Development | 2011

Biological significance of 5S rRNA import into human mitochondria: role of ribosomal protein MRP-L18

Alexandre Smirnov; Nina Entelis; Robert P. Martin; Ivan Tarassov

5S rRNA is an essential component of ribosomes of all living organisms, the only known exceptions being mitochondrial ribosomes of fungi, animals, and some protists. An intriguing situation distinguishes mammalian cells: Although the mitochondrial genome contains no 5S rRNA genes, abundant import of the nuclear DNA-encoded 5S rRNA into mitochondria was reported. Neither the detailed mechanism of this pathway nor its rationale was clarified to date. In this study, we describe an elegant molecular conveyor composed of a previously identified human 5S rRNA import factor, rhodanese, and mitochondrial ribosomal protein L18, thanks to which 5S rRNA molecules can be specifically withdrawn from the cytosolic pool and redirected to mitochondria, bypassing the classic nucleolar reimport pathway. Inside mitochondria, the cytosolic 5S rRNA is shown to be associated with mitochondrial ribosomes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Mitochondrial Enzyme Rhodanese Is Essential for 5 S Ribosomal RNA Import into Human Mitochondria

Alexandre Smirnov; Caroline Comte; Anne-Marie Mager-Heckel; Vanessa Addis; Igor A. Krasheninnikov; Robert P. Martin; Nina Entelis; Ivan Tarassov

5 S rRNA is an essential component of ribosomes. In eukaryotic cells, it is distinguished by particularly complex intracellular traffic, including nuclear export and re-import. The finding that in mammalian cells 5 S rRNA can eventually escape its usual circuit toward nascent ribosomes to get imported into mitochondria has made the scheme more complex, and it has raised questions about both the mechanism of 5 S rRNA mitochondrial targeting and its function inside the organelle. Previously, we showed that import of 5 S rRNA into mitochondria requires unknown cytosolic proteins. Here, one of them was identified as mitochondrial thiosulfate sulfurtransferase, rhodanese. Rhodanese in its misfolded form was found to possess a strong and specific 5 S rRNA binding activity, exploiting sites found earlier to function as signals of 5 S rRNA mitochondrial localization. The interaction with 5 S rRNA occurs cotranslationally and results in formation of a stable complex in which rhodanese is preserved in a compact enzymatically inactive conformation. Human 5 S rRNA in a branched Mg2+-free form, upon its interaction with misfolded rhodanese, demonstrates characteristic functional traits of Hsp40 cochaperones implicated in mitochondrial precursor protein targeting, suggesting that it may use this mechanism to ensure its own mitochondrial localization. Finally, silencing of the rhodanese gene caused not only a proportional decrease of 5 S rRNA import but also a general inhibition of mitochondrial translation, indicating the functional importance of the imported 5 S rRNA inside the organelle.


RNA | 2008

Two distinct structural elements of 5S rRNA are needed for its import into human mitochondria

Alexandre Smirnov; Ivan Tarassov; Anne-Marie Mager-Heckel; Michel Letzelter; Robert P. Martin; Igor A. Krasheninnikov; Nina Entelis

RNA import into mitochondria is a widespread phenomenon. Studied in details for yeast, protists, and plants, it still awaits thorough investigation for human cells, in which the nuclear DNA-encoded 5S rRNA is imported. Only the general requirements for this pathway have been described, whereas specific protein factors needed for 5S rRNA delivery into mitochondria and its structural determinants of import remain unknown. In this study, a systematic analysis of the possible role of human 5S rRNA structural elements in import was performed. Our experiments in vitro and in vivo show that two distinct regions of the human 5S rRNA molecule are needed for its mitochondrial targeting. One of them is located in the proximal part of the helix I and contains a conserved uncompensated G:U pair. The second and most important one is associated with the loop E-helix IV region with several noncanonical structural features. Destruction or even destabilization of these sites leads to a significant decrease of the 5S rRNA import efficiency. On the contrary, the beta-domain of the 5S rRNA was proven to be dispensable for import, and thus it can be deleted or substituted without affecting the 5S rRNA importability. This finding was used to demonstrate that the 5S rRNA can function as a vector for delivering heterologous RNA sequences into human mitochondria. 5S rRNA-based vectors containing a substitution of a part of the beta-domain by a foreign RNA sequence were shown to be much more efficiently imported in vivo than the wild-type 5S rRNA.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Mitochondrial targeting of recombinant RNAs modulates the level of a heteroplasmic mutation in human mitochondrial DNA associated with Kearns Sayre Syndrome

Caroline Comte; Yann Tonin; Anne-Marie Heckel-Mager; Abdeldjalil Boucheham; Alexandre Smirnov; Karine Auré; Anne Lombès; Robert P. Martin; Nina Entelis; Ivan Tarassov

Mitochondrial mutations, an important cause of incurable human neuromuscular diseases, are mostly heteroplasmic: mutated mitochondrial DNA is present in cells simultaneously with wild-type genomes, the pathogenic threshold being generally >70% of mutant mtDNA. We studied whether heteroplasmy level could be decreased by specifically designed oligoribonucleotides, targeted into mitochondria by the pathway delivering RNA molecules in vivo. Using mitochondrially imported RNAs as vectors, we demonstrated that oligoribonucleotides complementary to mutant mtDNA region can specifically reduce the proportion of mtDNA bearing a large deletion associated with the Kearns Sayre Syndrome in cultured transmitochondrial cybrid cells. These findings may be relevant to developing of a new tool for therapy of mtDNA associated diseases.


Biochemistry | 2008

Specific features of 5S rRNA structure — Its interactions with macromolecules and possible functions

Alexandre Smirnov; Nina Entelis; Igor A. Krasheninnikov; Robert P. Martin; Ivan Tarassov

Small non-coding RNAs are today a topic of great interest for molecular biologists because they can be regarded as relicts of a hypothetical “RNA world” which, apparently, preceded the modern stage of organic evolution on Earth. The small molecule of 5S rRNA (∼120 nucleotides) is a component of large ribosomal subunits of all living beings (5S rRNAs are not found only in mitoribosomes of fungi and metazoans). This molecule interacts with various protein factors and 23S (28S) rRNA. This review contains the accumulated data to date concerning 5S rRNA structure, interactions with other biological macromolecules, intracellular traffic, and functions in the cell.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Induced tRNA Import into Human Mitochondria: Implication of a Host Aminoacyl-tRNA-Synthetase

Ali Gowher; Alexandre Smirnov; Ivan Tarassov; Nina Entelis

In human cell, a subset of small non-coding RNAs is imported into mitochondria from the cytosol. Analysis of the tRNA import pathway allowing targeting of the yeast tRNALys CUU into human mitochondria demonstrates a similarity between the RNA import mechanisms in yeast and human cells. We show that the cytosolic precursor of human mitochondrial lysyl-tRNA synthetase (preKARS2) interacts with the yeast tRNALys CUU and small artificial RNAs which contain the structural elements determining the tRNA mitochondrial import, and facilitates their internalization by isolated human mitochondria. The tRNA import efficiency increased upon addition of the glycolytic enzyme enolase, previously found to be an actor of the yeast RNA import machinery. Finally, the role of preKARS2 in the RNA mitochondrial import has been directly demonstrated in vivo, in cultured human cells transfected with the yeast tRNA and artificial importable RNA molecules, in combination with preKARS2 overexpression or downregulation by RNA interference. These findings suggest that the requirement of protein factors for the RNA mitochondrial targeting might be a conserved feature of the RNA import pathway in different organisms.


FEBS Letters | 2007

tRNA import into yeast mitochondria is regulated by the ubiquitin-proteasome system

Irina Brandina; Alexandre Smirnov; Olga Kolesnikova; Nina Entelis; Igor A. Krasheninnikov; Robert P. Martin; Ivan Tarassov

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, one of two cytosolic lysine‐tRNAs is partially imported into mitochondria. We demonstrate that three components of the ubiquitin/26S proteasome system (UPS), Rpn13p, Rpn8p and Doa1p interact with the imported tRNA and with the essential factor of its mitochondrial targeting, pre‐Msk1p. Genetic and biochemical assays demonstrate that UPS plays a dual regulatory role, since the overall inhibition of cellular proteasome activity reduces tRNA import, while specific depletion of Rpn13p or Doa1p increases it. This result suggests a functional link between UPS and tRNA mitochondrial import in yeast and indicates on the existence of negative and positive import regulators.


Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2017

Discovery of new RNA classes and global RNA-binding proteins

Alexandre Smirnov; Cornelius Schneider; Jens Hör; Jörg Vogel

The identification of new RNA functions and the functional annotation of transcripts in genomes represent exciting yet challenging endeavours of modern biology. Crucial insights into the biological roles of RNA molecules can be gained from the identification of the proteins with which they form specific complexes. Modern interactome techniques permit to profile RNA-protein interactions in a genome-wide manner and identify new RNA classes associated with globally acting RNA-binding proteins. Applied to a variety of organisms, these methods are already revolutionising our understanding of RNA-mediated biological processes. Here, we focus on one such approach-Gradient sequencing or Grad-seq-which has recently guided the discovery of protein ProQ and its associated small RNAs as a new domain of post-transcriptional control in bacteria.


Archive | 2013

Mitochondrial Targeting of RNA and Mitochondrial Translation

Ivan Tarassov; Ivan Chicherin; Yann Tonin; Alexandre Smirnov; Petr Kamenski; Nina Entelis

Mitochondrial translation depends on the macromolecular components imported from the cytosol, which include translation factors, ribosomal proteins, aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, and a variable number of small noncoding RNAs. The lasts are essentially tRNAs, but other small RNAs, like mammalian 5S rRNA, are also concerned by the RNA mitochondrial targeting pathway. If their importance in mitochondrial translation was demonstrated in each case where it was addressed, the precise function of these molecules differs from one system to another: in many cases they complement lacking mtDNA encoded counterparts, in others can fulfill conditional functions, finally they can complement the lack of needed mitochondrial enzymatic activities. In any case, it appears that the innated capacity of mitochondria to import small RNA molecules is supplied by specific additional protein, often performing their “second job” to deliver the needed RNA in the organelle. This mechanism, still not understood in details, remains the unique natural pathway of nucleic acids delivery in mitochondria, and is therefore of a significant interest as a tool permitting to target this organelle with potentially therapeutic molecules and thus addressing a very important bulk of human pathologies linked with dysfunctions of mitochondrial translation machinery.


Journal of World Mitochondria Society | 2016

Mitochondrial targeting of RNA : mechanisms, functions and tool for therapy

Ivan Tarassov; Entelis Nina; Alexandre Smirnov; Anne-Marie Heckel; Ivan Chicherin

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Ivan Tarassov

University of Strasbourg

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Nina Entelis

University of Strasbourg

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Robert P. Martin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Caroline Comte

University of Strasbourg

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Yann Tonin

University of Strasbourg

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Anne-Marie Mager-Heckel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ali Gowher

University of Strasbourg

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Entelis Nina

University of Strasbourg

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