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Dive into the research topics where Danielle Leuenberger is active.

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Featured researches published by Danielle Leuenberger.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

The Tim9p-Tim10p complex binds to the transmembrane domains of the ADP/ATP carrier.

Sean P. Curran; Danielle Leuenberger; Wolfgang Oppliger; Carla M. Koehler

The soluble Tim9p–Tim10p (Tim, translocase of inner membrane) complex of the mitochondrial intermembrane space mediates the import of the carrier proteins and is a component of the TIM22 import system. The mechanism by which the Tim9p–Tim10p complex assembles and binds the carriers is not well understood, but previous studies have proposed that the conserved cysteine residues in the ‘twin CX3C’ motif coordinate zinc and potentially generate a zinc‐finger‐like structure that binds to the matrix loops of the carrier proteins. Here we have purified the native and recombinant Tim9p–Tim10p complex, and show that both complexes resemble each other and consist of three Tim9p and three Tim10p. Results from inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry studies failed to detect zinc in the Tim9p–Tim10p complex. Instead, the cysteine residues seemingly formed disulfide linkages. The Tim9p–Tim10p complex bound specifically to the transmembrane domains of the ADP/ATP carrier, but had no affinity for Tim23p, an inner membrane protein that is inserted via the TIM22 complex. The chaperone‐like Tim9p–Tim10p complex thus may prevent aggregation of the unfolded carrier proteins in the aqueous intermembrane space.


The EMBO Journal | 1999

Different import pathways through the mitochondrial intermembrane space for inner membrane proteins

Danielle Leuenberger; Nikolaus A. Bally; Gottfried Schatz; Carla M. Koehler

Earlier work on the protein import system of yeast mitochondria has identified two soluble 70 kDa protein complexes in the intermembrane space. One complex contains the essential proteins Tim9p and Tim10p and mediates transport of cytosolically‐made metabolite carrier proteins from the outer to the inner membrane. The other complex contains the non‐essential proteins Tim8p and Tim13p as well as loosely associated Tim9p; its function was unclear, but it interacted structurally or functionally with the Tim9p–Tim10p complex. We now show that the two 70 kDa complexes each mediate the import of a different subset of integral inner membrane proteins and that they can transfer these proteins to one of three different membrane insertion sites: the TIM22 complex, the TIM23 complex or an as yet uncharacterized insertion site. Yeast mitochondria thus use multiple pathways for escorting hydrophobic inner membrane proteins across the aqueous intermembrane space.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2002

The role of the Tim8p–Tim13p complex in a conserved import pathway for mitochondrial polytopic inner membrane proteins

Sean P. Curran; Danielle Leuenberger; Einhard Schmidt; Carla M. Koehler

Tim23p is imported via the TIM (translocase of inner membrane)22 pathway for mitochondrial inner membrane proteins. In contrast to precursors with an NH2-terminal targeting presequence that are imported in a linear NH2-terminal manner, we show that Tim23p crosses the outer membrane as a loop before inserting into the inner membrane. The Tim8p–Tim13p complex facilitates translocation across the intermembrane space by binding to the membrane spanning domains as shown by Tim23p peptide scans with the purified Tim8p–Tim13p complex and crosslinking studies with Tim23p fusion constructs. The interaction between Tim23p and the Tim8p–Tim13p complex is not dependent on zinc, and the purified Tim8p–Tim13p complex does not coordinate zinc in the conserved twin CX3C motif. Instead, the cysteine residues seemingly form intramolecular disulfide linkages. Given that proteins of the mitochondrial carrier family also pass through the TOM (translocase of outer membrane) complex as a loop, our study suggests that this translocation mechanism may be conserved. Thus, polytopic inner membrane proteins, which lack an NH2-terminal targeting sequence, pass through the TOM complex as a loop followed by binding of the small Tim proteins to the hydrophobic membrane spanning domains.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Presence of a Member of the Mitochondrial Carrier Family in Hydrogenosomes: Conservation of Membrane-Targeting Pathways between Hydrogenosomes and Mitochondria

Sabrina D. Dyall; Carla M. Koehler; Maria G. Delgadillo-Correa; Peter J. Bradley; Evelyn Plümper; Danielle Leuenberger; Christoph W. Turck; Patricia J. Johnson

ABSTRACT A number of microaerophilic eukaryotes lack mitochondria but possess another organelle involved in energy metabolism, the hydrogenosome. Limited phylogenetic analyses of nuclear genes support a common origin for these two organelles. We have identified a protein of the mitochondrial carrier family in the hydrogenosome ofTrichomonas vaginalis and have shown that this protein, Hmp31, is phylogenetically related to the mitochondrial ADP-ATP carrier (AAC). We demonstrate that the hydrogenosomal AAC can be targeted to the inner membrane of mitochondria isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae through the Tim9-Tim10 import pathway used for the assembly of mitochondrial carrier proteins. Conversely, yeast mitochondrial AAC can be targeted into the membranes of hydrogenosomes. The hydrogenosomal AAC contains a cleavable, N-terminal presequence; however, this sequence is not necessary for targeting the protein to the organelle. These data indicate that the membrane-targeting signal(s) for hydrogenosomal AAC is internal, similar to that found for mitochondrial carrier proteins. Our findings indicate that the membrane carriers and membrane protein-targeting machinery of hydrogenosomes and mitochondria have a common evolutionary origin. Together, they provide strong evidence that a single endosymbiont evolved into a progenitor organelle in early eukaryotic cells that ultimately give rise to these two distinct organelles and support the hydrogen hypothesis for the origin of the eukaryotic cell.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Tim18p, a new subunit of the TIM22 complex that mediates insertion of imported proteins into the yeast mitochondrial inner membrane.

Carla M. Koehler; Michael P. Murphy; Nikolaus A. Bally; Danielle Leuenberger; Wolfgang Oppliger; Luisita Dolfini; Tina Junne; Gottfried Schatz; Eran Or

ABSTRACT Import of carrier proteins from the cytoplasm into the mitochondrial inner membrane of yeast is mediated by a distinct system consisting of two soluble 70-kDa protein complexes in the intermembrane space and a 300-kDa complex in the inner membrane, the TIM22 complex. The TIM22 complex contains the peripheral subunits Tim9p, Tim10p, and Tim12p and the integral membrane subunits Tim22p and Tim54p. We identify here an additional subunit, an 18-kDa integral membrane protein termed Tim18p. This protein is made as a 21.9-kDa precursor which is imported into mitochondria and processed to its mature form. When mitochondria are gently solubilized, Tim18p comigrates with the other subunits of the TIM22 complex on nondenaturing gels and is coimmunoprecipitated with Tim54p and Tim12p. Tim18p does not cofractionate with the TIM23 complex upon immunoprecipitation or nondenaturing gel electrophoresis. Deletion of Tim18p decreases the growth rate of yeast cells by a factor of two and is synthetically lethal with temperature-sensitive mutations in Tim9p or Tim10p. It also impairs the import of several precursor proteins into isolated mitochondria, and lowers the apparent mass of the TIM22 complex. We suggest that Tim18p functions in the assembly and stabilization of the TIM22 complex but does not directly participate in protein insertion into the inner membrane.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The Role of Hot13p and Redox Chemistry in the Mitochondrial TIM22 Import Pathway

Sean P. Curran; Danielle Leuenberger; Edward P. Leverich; David K. Hwang; Kristen N. Beverly; Carla M. Koehler

The small Tim proteins in the mitochondrial intermembrane space participate in the TIM22 import pathway for assembly of the inner membrane. Assembly of the small TIM complexes requires the conserved “twin CX3C” motif that forms juxtapositional intramolecular disulfide bonds. Here we identify a new intermembrane space protein, Hot13p, as the first component of a pathway that mediates assembly of the small TIM complexes. The small Tim proteins require Hot13p for assembly into a 70-kDa complex in the intermembrane space. Once assembled the small TIM complexes escort hydrophobic inner membrane proteins en route to the TIM22 complex. The mechanism by which the small Tim proteins bind and release substrate is not understood, and we investigated the affect of oxidant/reductant treatment on the TIM22 import pathway. With in organello import studies, oxidizing agents arrest the ADP/ATP carrier (AAC) bound to the Tim9p-Tim10p complex in the intermembrane space; this productive intermediate can be chased into the inner membrane upon subsequent treatment with reductant. Moreover, AAC import is markedly decreased by oxidant treatment in Δhot13 mitochondria and improved when Hot13p is overexpressed, suggesting Hot13p may function to remodel the small TIM complexes during import. Together these results suggest that the small TIM complexes have a specialized assembly pathway in the intermembrane space and that the local redox state of the TIM complexes may mediate translocation of inner membrane proteins.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001

The Essential Function of the Small Tim Proteins in the TIM22 Import Pathway Does Not Depend on Formation of the Soluble 70-Kilodalton Complex

Michael P. Murphy; Danielle Leuenberger; Sean P. Curran; Wolfgang Oppliger; Carla M. Koehler

ABSTRACT The TIM22 protein import pathway of the yeast mitochondrion contains several components, including a family of five proteins (Tim8p, -9p, -10p, -12p, and -13p [Tim, for translocase of inner membrane]) that are located in the intermembrane space and are 25% identical. Tim9p and Tim10p have dual roles in mediating the import of inner membrane proteins. Like the Tim8p-Tim13p complex, the Tim9p-Tim10p complex functions as a putative chaperone to guide hydrophobic precursors across the intermembrane space. Like membrane-associated Tim12p, they are members of the Tim18p-Tim22p-Tim54p membrane complex that mediates precursor insertion into the membrane. To understand the role of this family in protein import, we have used a genetic approach to manipulate the complement of the small Tim proteins. A strain has been constructed that lacks the 70-kDa soluble Tim8p-Tim13p and Tim9p-Tim10p complexes in the intermembrane space. Instead, a functional version of Tim9p (Tim9S67Cp), identified as a second-site suppressor of a conditional tim10 mutant, maintains viability. Characterization of this strain revealed that Tim9S67Cp and Tim10p were tightly associated with the inner membrane, the soluble 70-kDa Tim8p-Tim13p and Tim9p-Tim10p complexes were not detectable, and the rate of protein import into isolated mitochondria proceeded at a slower rate. An arrested translocation intermediate bound to Tim9S67Cp was located in the intermembrane space, associated with the inner membrane. We suggest that the 70-kDa complexes facilitate import, similar to the outer membrane receptors of the TOM (hetero-oligomeric translocase of the outer membrane) complex, and the essential role of Tim9p and Tim10p may be to mediate protein insertion in the inner membrane with the TIM22 complex.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Tim54p connects inner membrane assembly and proteolytic pathways in the mitochondrion

David K. Hwang; Steven M. Claypool; Danielle Leuenberger; Heather L. Tienson; Carla M. Koehler

Tim54p, a component of the inner membrane TIM22 complex, does not directly mediate the import of inner membrane substrates but is required for assembly/stability of the 300-kD TIM22 complex. In addition, Δtim54 yeast exhibit a petite-negative phenotype (also observed in yeast harboring mutations in the F1Fo ATPase, the ADP/ATP carrier, mitochondrial morphology components, or the i–AAA protease, Yme1p). Interestingly, other import mutants in our strain background are not petite-negative. We report that Tim54p is not involved in maintenance of mitochondrial DNA or mitochondrial morphology. Rather, Tim54p mediates assembly of an active Yme1p complex, after Yme1p is imported via the TIM23 pathway. Defective Yme1p assembly is likely the major contributing factor for the petite-negativity in strains lacking functional Tim54p. Thus, Tim54p has two independent functions: scaffolding/stability for the TIM22 membrane complex and assembly of Yme1p into a proteolytically active complex. As such, Tim54p links protein import, assembly, and turnover pathways in the mitochondrion.


Traffic | 2003

The role of Tim9p in the assembly of the TIM22 import complexes.

Danielle Leuenberger; Sean P. Curran; David Wong; Carla M. Koehler

Tim9p is located in the soluble 70‐kDa Tim9p–Tim10p complex and the 300‐kDa membrane complex in the mitochondrial TIM22 protein import system, which mediates the import of inner membrane proteins. From a collection of temperature‐sensitive mutants, we have analyzed two in detail. tim9–3 contained two mutations and tim9–19 contained one mutation, all located near the ‘twin CX3C’ motif that is conserved in the small Tim proteins. As a result, the import components in the tim9–3 mutant mitochondria were severely reduced and assembled into complexes of aberrant sizes. Protein import was severely reduced and Tim9p and Tim10p binding to in vitro imported ADP/ATP carrier was impaired. In the tim9–19 mutant mitochondria, the 300‐kDa membrane complex was assembled, although the soluble 70‐kDa Tim9p–Tim10p complex was not detectable. Protein import was decreased only two‐fold. When coexpressed in Escherichia coli, tim9–19 and TIM10 proteins failed to assemble into a 70‐kDa complex. Our findings suggest that residues near the ‘twin CX3C’ motif are important for the assembly of Tim9p in both the Tim9p–Tim10p complex and the 300‐kDa membrane complex.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999

Human deafness dystonia syndrome is a mitochondrial disease

Carla M. Koehler; Danielle Leuenberger; Sabeeha S. Merchant; Anja Renold; Tina Junne; Gottfried Schatz

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Sean P. Curran

University of Southern California

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David K. Hwang

University of California

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Michael P. Murphy

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

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