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Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2004

The mitochondrial transporter family (SLC25): physiological and pathological implications

Ferdinando Palmieri

The mitochondrial carriers (MCs) shuttle a variety of metabolites across the inner mitochondrial membrane (i.m.m.). In man they are encoded by the SLC25 genes. Some MCs have isoforms encoded by different SLC25 genes, whereas the phosphate carrier has two variants arising from an alternative splicing of SLC25A3. Six MCs have been sequenced after purification, and many more have been identified from their transport and kinetic properties following heterologous over-expression and reconstitution into liposomes. All MCs of known function belong to the same protein family, since their polypeptide chains consist of three tandemly related sequences of about 100 amino acids, and the repeats of the different carriers are homologous. They probably function as homodimers, each monomer being folded in the membrane into six transmembrane segments. The functional information obtained in studies with mitochondria and/or the reconstituted system has helped to gain an insight into the physiological role of the MCs in cell metabolism, as have tissue distribution, the use of knock-out mice (and/or yeast) and over-expression in human cell lines (or yeast) of individual carriers and isoforms. At the same time, the cloning and functional identification of many SLC25 genes has made it possible (i) to identify the genes (and their defects) responsible for some diseases, e.g. Stanley syndrome and Amish microcephaly, and (ii) where the genes were already known, to characterize the function of the gene products and hence understand the molecular basis and the symptoms of the diseases, e.g. hyperornithinaemia, hyperammonaemia and homocitrullinuria (HHH) syndrome and type II citrullinemia. It is likely that further extension and functional characterization of the SLC25 gene family will elucidate other diseases caused by MC deficiency.


Methods in Enzymology | 1995

[25] Mitochondrial metabolite carrier proteins: Purification, reconstitution, and transport studies

Ferdinando Palmieri; Cesare Indiveri; Faustino Bisaccia; Vito Iacobazzi

Publisher Summary This chapter also discusses the methods for purifying metabolite carriers from mitochondria, reconstituting them in liposomes, and their transport activities in the reconstituted system. The general purification scheme applied for the isolation of mitochondrial metabolite carriers in functional state involves solubilization by nonionic detergents; chromatography on hydroxyapatite, recovering the respective carrier in the eluate; and final purification using various further chromatographic procedures. The detailed procedures for the purification of the mitochondrial carriers for phosphate, oxoglutarate/malate, dicarboxylates, tricarboxylates (citrate), carnitine/acylcarnitines, aspartate/glutamate, and ornithine/citrulline in functionally active state are described. For functional characterization in terms of transport activity, the purified carrier proteins have to be reconstituted into liposomal membranes. The selection of methods for the functional reconstitution of mitochondrial carrier proteins is restricted by the fact that these carriers are denatured by detergents with high critical micellar concentration; thus, dialysis and related methods cannot be applied.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

Diseases caused by defects of mitochondrial carriers: A review

Ferdinando Palmieri

A strikingly large number of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations have been found to be the cause of respiratory chain and oxidative phosphorylation defects. These mitochondrial disorders were the first to be investigated after the small mtDNA had been sequenced in the 80s. Only recently numerous diseases resulting from mutations in nuclear genes encoding mitochondrial proteins have been characterized. Among these, nine are caused by defects of mitochondrial carriers, a family of nuclear-coded proteins that shuttle a variety of metabolites across the mitochondrial membrane. Mutations of mitochondrial carrier genes involved in mitochondrial functions other than oxidative phosphorylation are responsible for carnitine/acylcarnitine carrier deficiency, HHH syndrome, aspartate/glutamate isoform 2 deficiency, Amish microcephaly, and neonatal myoclonic epilepsy; these disorders are characterized by specific metabolic dysfunctions, depending on the physiological role of the affected carrier in intermediary metabolism. Defects of mitochondrial carriers that supply mitochondria with the substrates of oxidative phosphorylation, inorganic phosphate and ADP, are responsible for diseases characterized by defective energy production. Herein, all the mitochondrial carrier-associated diseases known to date are reviewed for the first time. Particular emphasis is given to the molecular basis and pathogenetic mechanism of these inherited disorders.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Identification of the Yeast Mitochondrial Transporter for Oxaloacetate and Sulfate

Luigi Palmieri; A. Vozza; Gennaro Agrimi; V. De Marco; Michael J. Runswick; Ferdinando Palmieri; John E. Walker

Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes 35 members of the mitochondrial carrier family, including the OAC protein. The transport specificities of some family members are known, but most are not. The function of the OAC has been revealed by overproduction inEscherichia coli, reconstitution into liposomes, and demonstration that the proteoliposomes transport malonate, oxaloacetate, sulfate, and thiosulfate. Reconstituted OAC catalyzes both unidirectional transport and exchange of substrates. In S. cerevisiae, OAC is in inner mitochondrial membranes, and deletion of its gene greatly reduces transport of oxaloacetate sulfate, thiosulfate, and malonate. Mitochondria from wild-type cells swelled in isoosmotic solutions of ammonium salts of oxaloacetate, sulfate, thiosulfate, and malonate, indicating that these anions are cotransported with protons. Overexpression of OAC in the deletion strain increased greatly the [35S]sulfate/sulfate and [35S]sulfate/oxaloacetate exchanges in proteoliposomes reconstituted with digitonin extracts of mitochondria. The main physiological role of OAC appears to be to use the proton-motive force to take up into mitochondria oxaloacetate produced from pyruvate by cytoplasmic pyruvate carboxylase.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

The Mitochondrial Ornithine Transporter BACTERIAL EXPRESSION, RECONSTITUTION, FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION, AND TISSUE DISTRIBUTION OF TWO HUMAN ISOFORMS

Guiseppe Fiermonte; Vincenza Dolce; Laura David; Filippo Santorelli; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Ferdinando Palmieri; John E. Walker

Two isoforms of the human ornithine carrier, ORC1 and ORC2, have been identified by overexpression of the proteins in bacteria and by study of the transport properties of the purified proteins reconstituted into liposomes. Both transport l-isomers of ornithine, lysine, arginine, and citrulline by exchange and by unidirectional mechanisms, and they are inactivated by the same inhibitors. ORC2 has a broader specificity than ORC1, and l- and d-histidine, l-homoarginine, and d-isomers of ornithine, lysine, and ornithine are all substrates. Both proteins are expressed in a wide range of human tissues, but ORC1 is the predominant form. The highest levels of expression of both isoforms are in the liver. Five mutant forms of ORC1 associated with the human disease hyperornithinemia-hyperammonemia-homocitrullinuria were also made. The mutations abolish the transport properties of the protein. In patients with hyperornithinemia-hyperammonemia-homocitrullinuria, isoform ORC2 is unmodified, and its presence compensates partially for defective ORC1.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Identification of the Human Mitochondrial Oxodicarboxylate Carrier BACTERIAL EXPRESSION, RECONSTITUTION, FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION, TISSUE DISTRIBUTION, AND CHROMOSOMAL LOCATION

Giuseppe Fiermonte; Vincenza Dolce; Luigi Palmieri; Mario Ventura; Michael J. Runswick; Ferdinando Palmieri; John E. Walker

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the genes ODC1 and ODC2 encode isoforms of the oxodicarboxylate carrier. They both transport C5-C7 oxodicarboxylates across the inner membranes of mitochondria and are members of the family of mitochondrial carrier proteins. Orthologs are encoded in the genomes of Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster, and a human expressed sequence tag (EST) encodes part of a closely related protein. Information from the EST has been used to complete the human cDNA sequence. This sequence has been used to map the gene to chromosome 14q11.2 and to show that the gene is expressed in all tissues that were examined. The human protein was produced by overexpression in Escherichia coli, purified, and reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles. It has similar transport characteristics to the yeast oxodicarboxylate carrier proteins (ODCs). Both the human and yeast ODCs catalyzed the transport of the oxodicarboxylates 2-oxoadipate and 2-oxoglutarate by a counter-exchange mechanism. Adipate, glutarate, and to a lesser extent, pimelate, 2-oxopimelate, 2-aminoadipate, oxaloacetate, and citrate were also transported by the human ODC. The main differences between the human and yeast ODCs are that 2-aminoadipate is transported by the former but not by the latter, whereas malate is transported by the yeast ODCs but not by the human ortholog. In mammals, 2-oxoadipate is a common intermediate in the catabolism of lysine, tryptophan, and hydroxylysine. It is transported from the cytoplasm into mitochondria where it is converted into acetyl-CoA. Defects in human ODC are likely to be a cause of 2-oxoadipate acidemia, an inborn error of metabolism of lysine, tryptophan, and hydroxylysine.


Molecular Membrane Biology | 2008

Functional characterization of residues within the carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase RX2PANAAXF distinct motif

J. Ramón De Lucas; Cesare Indiveri; Annamaria Tonazzi; Patricia Pérez; Nicola Giangregorio; Vito Iacobazzi; Ferdinando Palmieri

The mitochondrial carnitine/acylcarnitine carrier (CAC) is characterized by the presence of a distinct motif, RXXPANAAXF, within its sixth transmembrane α-helix. In this study, we analysed the role of the amino acids of this motif in the structure-function relationships of the human CAC by using two complementary approaches. First, we performed functional analysis in the model fungus Aspergillus nidulans of selected mutations with structural and functional relevance. Second, similar mutant human CACs were biochemically characterized after their reconstitution into liposomes. Both analyses have provided relevant information on the importance and role of the CAC motif residues in the activity and metabolic function of CAC. Only the two adjacent alanines, Ala281 and Ala282 in the human CAC, have been found not to be crucial for transport activity and in vivo function. Results obtained from amino acid substitutions of residues Arg275, Asn280 and Phe284 of human CAC together with structural analysis using molecular modelling of the carrier suggest that R275, N280 and F284 are involved in substrate binding during acylcarnitine/carnitine translocation. Furthermore, functional analysis of mutations of residues Pro278 and Ala279 in A. nidulans, together with kinetic data in reconstituted liposomes, suggest a predominant structural role for these amino acids.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Identification of the Mitochondrial Glutamate Transporter BACTERIAL EXPRESSION, RECONSTITUTION, FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION, AND TISSUE DISTRIBUTION OF TWO HUMAN ISOFORMS

Giuseppe Fiermonte; Luigi Palmieri; Simona Todisco; Gennaro Agrimi; Ferdinando Palmieri; John E. Walker


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Identification in Saccharomyces cerevisiae of Two Isoforms of a Novel Mitochondrial Transporter for 2-Oxoadipate and 2-Oxoglutarate

Luigi Palmieri; Gennaro Agrimi; Michael J. Runswick; Ian M. Fearnley; Ferdinando Palmieri; John E. Walker


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2006

Functional and Structural Role of Amino Acid Residues in the Even-numbered Transmembrane α-Helices of the Bovine Mitochondrial Oxoglutarate Carrier

Anna Rita Cappello; Daniela Valeria Miniero; Rosita Curcio; Anna Ludovico; Lucia Daddabbo; Italo Stipani; Alan J. Robinson; Edmund R. S. Kunji; Ferdinando Palmieri

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Luigi Palmieri

Medical Research Council

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Gennaro Agrimi

Medical Research Council

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Vincenza Dolce

Medical Research Council

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