David U. Mick
University of Freiburg
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Featured researches published by David U. Mick.
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2011
David U. Mick; Thomas D. Fox; Peter Rehling
Mitochondria maintain genome and translation machinery to synthesize a small subset of subunits of the oxidative phosphorylation system. To build up functional enzymes, these organellar gene products must assemble with imported subunits that are encoded in the nucleus. New findings on the early steps of cytochrome c oxidase assembly reveal how the mitochondrial translation of its core component, cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (Cox1), is directly coupled to the assembly of this respiratory complex.
Science | 2006
Michael Meinecke; Richard Wagner; Peter Kovermann; Bernard Guiard; David U. Mick; Dana P. Hutu; Wolfgang Voos; Kaye N. Truscott; Agnieszka Chacinska; Nikolaus Pfanner; Peter Rehling
Transport of metabolites across the mitochondrial inner membrane is highly selective, thereby maintaining the electrochemical proton gradient that functions as the main driving force for cellular adenosine triphosphate synthesis. Mitochondria import many preproteins via the presequence translocase of the inner membrane. However, the reconstituted Tim23 protein constitutes a pore remaining mainly in its open form, a state that would be deleterious in organello. We found that the intermembrane space domain of Tim50 induced the Tim23 channel to close. Presequences overcame this effect and activated the channel for translocation. Thus, the hydrophilic cis domain of Tim50 maintains the permeability barrier of mitochondria by closing the translocation pore in a presequence-regulated manner.
Current Biology | 2006
Martin van der Laan; Nils Wiedemann; David U. Mick; Bernard Guiard; Peter Rehling; Nikolaus Pfanner
The mitochondrial inner membrane harbors complexes of the respiratory chain and translocase complexes for preproteins. The membrane potential generated by the respiratory chain is essential for ATP production by the mitochondrial ATP synthase and as a driving force for protein import. It is generally believed that the preprotein translocases just use the membrane potential without getting into physical contact with respiratory-chain complexes. Here, we show that the presequence translocase interacts with the respiratory chain. Tim21, a specific subunit of the sorting-active presequence translocase , recruits proton-pumping respiratory-chain complexes and stimulates preprotein insertion. Thus, the presequence translocase cooperates with the respiratory chain and promotes membrane-potential-dependent protein sorting into the inner mitochondrial membrane. These findings suggest a new coupling mechanism in an energy-transducing membrane.
The EMBO Journal | 2007
David U. Mick; Karina Wagner; Martin van der Laan; Ann E. Frazier; Inge Perschil; Magdalena Pawlas; Helmut E. Meyer; Bettina Warscheid; Peter Rehling
Cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) of the respiratory chain is assembled from nuclear and mitochondrially‐encoded subunits. Defects in the assembly process lead to severe human disorders such as Leigh syndrome. Shy1 is an assembly factor for complex IV in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and mutations of its human homolog, SURF1, are the most frequent cause for Leigh syndrome. We report that Shy1 promotes complex IV biogenesis through association with different protein modules; Shy1 interacts with Mss51 and Cox14, translational regulators of Cox1. Additionally, Shy1 associates with the subcomplexes of complex IV that are potential assembly intermediates. Formation of these subcomplexes depends on Coa1 (YIL157c), a novel assembly factor that cooperates with Shy1. Moreover, partially assembled forms of complex IV bound to Shy1 and Cox14 can associate with the bc1 complex to form transitional supercomplexes. We suggest that Shy1 links Cox1 translational regulation to complex IV assembly and supercomplex formation.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2006
Ann E. Frazier; Rebecca D. Taylor; David U. Mick; Bettina Warscheid; Nadine Stoepel; Helmut E. Meyer; Michael T. Ryan; Bernard Guiard; Peter Rehling
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mdm38 and Ylh47 are homologues of human Letm1, a protein implicated in Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome. We analyzed the function of Mdm38 and Ylh47 in yeast mitochondria to gain insight into the role of Letm1. We find that mdm38Δ mitochondria have reduced amounts of certain mitochondrially encoded proteins and low levels of complex III and IV and accumulate unassembled Atp6 of complex V of the respiratory chain. Mdm38 is especially required for efficient transport of Atp6 and cytochrome b across the inner membrane, whereas Ylh47 plays a minor role in this process. Both Mdm38 and Ylh47 form stable complexes with mitochondrial ribosomes, similar to what has been reported for Oxa1, a central component of the mitochondrial export machinery. Our results indicate that Mdm38 functions as a component of an Oxa1-independent insertion machinery in the inner membrane and that Mdm38 plays a critical role in the biogenesis of the respiratory chain by coupling ribosome function to protein transport across the inner membrane.
Cell | 2012
David U. Mick; Sven Dennerlein; Heike Wiese; Robert Reinhold; David Pacheu-Grau; Isotta Lorenzi; Florin Sasarman; Woranontee Weraarpachai; Eric A. Shoubridge; Bettina Warscheid; Peter Rehling
Mitochondrial respiratory-chain complexes assemble from subunits of dual genetic origin assisted by specialized assembly factors. Whereas core subunits are translated on mitochondrial ribosomes, others are imported after cytosolic translation. How imported subunits are ushered to assembly intermediates containing mitochondria-encoded subunits is unresolved. Here, we report a comprehensive dissection of early cytochrome c oxidase assembly intermediates containing proteins required for normal mitochondrial translation and reveal assembly factors promoting biogenesis of human respiratory-chain complexes. We find that TIM21, a subunit of the inner-membrane presequence translocase, is also present in the major assembly intermediates containing newly mitochondria-synthesized and imported respiratory-chain subunits, which we term MITRAC complexes. Human TIM21 is dispensable for protein import but required for integration of early-assembling, presequence-containing subunits into respiratory-chain intermediates. We establish an unexpected molecular link between the TIM23 transport machinery and assembly of respiratory-chain complexes that regulate mitochondrial protein synthesis in response to their assembly state.
Developmental Cell | 2015
David U. Mick; Rachel B. Rodrigues; Ryan Leib; Christopher M. Adams; Allis S. Chien; Steven P. Gygi; Maxence V. Nachury
While cilia are recognized as important signaling organelles, the extent of ciliary functions remains unknown because of difficulties in cataloguing proteins from mammalian primary cilia. We present a method that readily captures rapid snapshots of the ciliary proteome by selectively biotinylating ciliary proteins using a cilia-targeted proximity labeling enzyme (cilia-APEX). Besides identifying known ciliary proteins, cilia-APEX uncovered several ciliary signaling molecules. The kinases PKA, AMPK, and LKB1 were validated as bona fide ciliary proteins and PKA was found to regulate Hedgehog signaling in primary cilia. Furthermore, proteomics profiling of Ift27/Bbs19 mutant cilia correctly detected BBSome accumulation inside Ift27(-/-) cilia and revealed that β-arrestin 2 and the viral receptor CAR are candidate cargoes of the BBSome. This work demonstrates that proximity labeling can be applied to proteomics of non-membrane-enclosed organelles and suggests that proteomics profiling of cilia will enable a rapid and powerful characterization of ciliopathies.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010
Agnieszka Chacinska; Martin van der Laan; Carola S. Mehnert; Bernard Guiard; David U. Mick; Dana P. Hutu; Kaye N. Truscott; Nils Wiedemann; Chris Meisinger; Nikolaus Pfanner; Peter Rehling
ABSTRACT Mitochondrial import of cleavable preproteins occurs at translocation contact sites, where the translocase of the outer membrane (TOM) associates with the presequence translocase of the inner membrane (TIM23) in a supercomplex. Different views exist on the mechanism of how TIM23 mediates preprotein sorting to either the matrix or inner membrane. On the one hand, two TIM23 forms were proposed, a matrix transport form containing the presequence translocase-associated motor (PAM; TIM23-PAM) and a sorting form containing Tim21 (TIM23SORT). On the other hand, it was reported that TIM23 and PAM are permanently associated in a single-entity translocase. We have accumulated distinct transport intermediates of preproteins to analyze the translocases in their active, preprotein-carrying state. We identified two different forms of active TOM-TIM23 supercomplexes, TOM-TIM23SORT and TOM-TIM23-PAM. These two supercomplexes do not represent separate pathways but are in dynamic exchange during preprotein translocation and sorting. Depending on the signals of the preproteins, switches between the different forms of supercomplex and TIM23 are required for the completion of preprotein import.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
David U. Mick; Milena Vukotic; Heike Piechura; Helmut E. Meyer; Bettina Warscheid; Markus Deckers; Peter Rehling
Coa3 and Cox14 form assembly intermediates with newly synthesized Cox1 and are required for association of the Mss51 translational activator with these complexes.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010
Heike Bauerschmitt; David U. Mick; Markus Deckers; Christine Vollmer; Soledad Funes; Kirsten Kehrein; Martin Ott; Peter Rehling; Johannes M. Herrmann
Here we report that Mdm38 and Mba1 display overlapping functions in mitochondrial protein expression. Both Mdm38 and Mba1 interact with mitochondrial ribosomes and are required for translation of COX1 and cytochrome b mRNAs.