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Dive into the research topics where Maria Bohnert is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Bohnert.


Trends in Cell Biology | 2012

Role of MINOS in mitochondrial membrane architecture and biogenesis

Martin van der Laan; Maria Bohnert; Nils Wiedemann; Nikolaus Pfanner

Mitochondria possess a complex architecture with two membranes. The inner membrane is divided into two domains: the inner boundary membrane, which is adjacent to the outer membrane, and membrane invaginations termed cristae. Both domains are connected by tubular openings, the crista junctions. Recent studies led to the identification of a large protein complex that is crucial for establishing inner-membrane architecture. This mitochondrial inner-membrane organizing system (MINOS) interacts with protein translocases of the outer membrane that are functionally connected to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-mitochondria encounter structure. Here, we propose that MINOS forms a central part of an ER-mitochondria organizing network (ERMIONE) that controls mitochondrial membrane architecture and biogenesis.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011

Composition and topology of the endoplasmic reticulum-mitochondria encounter structure.

David A. Stroud; Silke Oeljeklaus; Sebastian Wiese; Maria Bohnert; Urs Lewandrowski; Albert Sickmann; Bernard Guiard; Martin van der Laan; Bettina Warscheid; Nils Wiedemann

Eukaryotic cells contain multiple organelles, which are functionally and structurally interconnected. The endoplasmic reticulum-mitochondria encounter structure (ERMES) forms a junction between mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Four ERMES proteins are known in yeast, the ER-anchored protein Mmm1 and three mitochondria-associated proteins, Mdm10, Mdm12 and Mdm34, with functions related to mitochondrial morphology and protein biogenesis. We mapped the glycosylation sites of ERMES and demonstrate that three asparagine residues in the N‑terminal domain of Mmm1 are glycosylated. While the glycosylation is dispensable, the cytosolic C‑terminal domain of Mmm1 that connects to the Mdm proteins is required for Mmm1 function. To analyze the composition of ERMES, we determined the subunits by quantitative mass spectrometry. We identified the calcium-binding GTPase Gem1 as a new ERMES subunit, revealing that ERMES is composed of five genuine subunits. Taken together, ERMES represents a platform that integrates components with functions in formation of ER-mitochondria junctions, maintenance of mitochondrial morphology, protein biogenesis and calcium binding.


FEBS Letters | 2007

A dynamic machinery for import of mitochondrial precursor proteins

Maria Bohnert; Nikolaus Pfanner; Martin van der Laan

Mitochondria contain ∼1000 different proteins, which are located in four different compartments, outer membrane, inner membrane, intermembrane space and matrix. The vast majority of these proteins has to be imported from the cytosol. Therefore, sophisticated molecular machineries have evolved that mediate protein translocation across or insertion into mitochondrial membranes and subsequent assembly into multi‐subunit complexes. While the initial entry of virtually all mitochondrial proteins is mediated by the general import pore of the outer membrane, at least four different downstream pathways are dedicated to import and assembly of proteins into a specific compartment.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2012

Role of MINOS in Mitochondrial Membrane Architecture: Cristae Morphology and Outer Membrane Interactions Differentially Depend on Mitofilin Domains

Ralf M. Zerbes; Maria Bohnert; David A. Stroud; Karina von der Malsburg; Anita M. Kram; Silke Oeljeklaus; Bettina Warscheid; Thomas Becker; Nils Wiedemann; Marten Veenhuis; Ida J. van der Klei; Nikolaus Pfanner; Martin van der Laan

The mitochondrial inner membrane contains a large protein complex crucial for membrane architecture, the mitochondrial inner membrane organizing system (MINOS). MINOS is required for keeping cristae membranes attached to the inner boundary membrane via crista junctions and interacts with protein complexes of the mitochondrial outer membrane. To study if outer membrane interactions and maintenance of cristae morphology are directly coupled, we generated mutant forms of mitofilin/Fcj1 (formation of crista junction protein 1), a core component of MINOS. Mitofilin consists of a transmembrane anchor in the inner membrane and intermembrane space domains, including a coiled-coil domain and a conserved C-terminal domain. Deletion of the C-terminal domain disrupted the MINOS complex and led to release of cristae membranes from the inner boundary membrane, whereas the interaction of mitofilin with the translocase of the outer membrane (TOM) and the sorting and assembly machinery (SAM) were enhanced. Deletion of the coiled-coil domain also disturbed the MINOS complex and cristae morphology; however, the interactions of mitofilin with TOM and SAM were differentially affected. Finally, deletion of both intermembrane space domains disturbed MINOS integrity as well as interactions with TOM and SAM. Thus, the intermembrane space domains of mitofilin play distinct roles in interactions with outer membrane complexes and maintenance of MINOS and cristae morphology, demonstrating that MINOS contacts to TOM and SAM are not sufficient for the maintenance of inner membrane architecture.


Cell | 2013

Coupling of Mitochondrial Import and Export Translocases by Receptor-Mediated Supercomplex Formation

Jian Qiu; Lena Sophie Wenz; Ralf M. Zerbes; Silke Oeljeklaus; Maria Bohnert; David A. Stroud; Christophe Wirth; Lars Ellenrieder; Nicolas Thornton; Stephan Kutik; Sebastian Wiese; Agnes Schulze-Specking; Nicole Zufall; Agnieszka Chacinska; Bernard Guiard; Carola Hunte; Bettina Warscheid; Martin van der Laan; Nikolaus Pfanner; Nils Wiedemann; Thomas Becker

The mitochondrial outer membrane harbors two protein translocases that are essential for cell viability: the translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane (TOM) and the sorting and assembly machinery (SAM). The precursors of β-barrel proteins use both translocases-TOM for import to the intermembrane space and SAM for export into the outer membrane. It is unknown if the translocases cooperate and where the β-barrel of newly imported proteins is formed. We established a position-specific assay for monitoring β-barrel formation in vivo and in organello and demonstrated that the β-barrel was formed and membrane inserted while the precursor was bound to SAM. β-barrel formation was inhibited by SAM mutants and, unexpectedly, by mutants of the central import receptor, Tom22. We show that the cytosolic domain of Tom22 links TOM and SAM into a supercomplex, facilitating precursor transfer on the intermembrane space side. Our study reveals receptor-mediated coupling of import and export translocases as a means of precursor channeling.


Biological Chemistry | 2012

Mitofilin complexes: conserved organizers of mitochondrial membrane architecture.

Ralf M. Zerbes; Ida J. van der Klei; Marten Veenhuis; Nikolaus Pfanner; Martin van der Laan; Maria Bohnert

Abstract Mitofilin proteins are crucial organizers of mitochondrial architecture. They are located in the inner mitochondrial membrane and interact with several protein complexes of the outer membrane, thereby generating contact sites between the two membrane systems of mitochondria. Within the inner membrane, mitofilins are part of hetero-oligomeric protein complexes that have been termed the mitochondrial inner membrane organizing system (MINOS). MINOS integrity is required for the maintenance of the characteristic morphology of the inner mitochondrial membrane, with an inner boundary region closely apposed to the outer membrane and cristae membranes, which form large tubular invaginations that protrude into the mitochondrial matrix and harbor the enzyme complexes of the oxidative phosphorylation machinery. MINOS deficiency comes along with a loss of crista junction structures and the detachment of cristae from the inner boundary membrane. MINOS has been conserved in evolution from unicellular eukaryotes to humans, where alterations of MINOS subunits are associated with multiple pathological conditions.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2012

Role of MINOS in protein biogenesis of the mitochondrial outer membrane

Maria Bohnert; Lena-Sophie Wenz; Ralf M. Zerbes; Susanne E. Horvath; David A. Stroud; Karina von der Malsburg; Judith M. Müller; Silke Oeljeklaus; Inge Perschil; Bettina Warscheid; Agnieszka Chacinska; Marten Veenhuis; Ida J. van der Klei; Günther Daum; Nils Wiedemann; Thomas Becker; Nikolaus Pfanner; Martin van der Laan

The mitochondrial inner membrane organizing system (MINOS) is a large protein complex required for maintaining inner membrane architecture. We report that MINOS independently interacts with both preprotein translocases of the outer mitochondrial membrane and plays a role in the biogenesis of β-barrel proteins of the outer membrane.


Current Biology | 2010

Cooperation of Stop-Transfer and Conservative Sorting Mechanisms in Mitochondrial Protein Transport

Maria Bohnert; Peter Rehling; Bernard Guiard; Johannes M. Herrmann; Nikolaus Pfanner; Martin van der Laan

The mitochondrial inner membrane is a highly protein-rich membrane with central importance for oxidative phosphorylation and metabolite transport. A large number of inner-membrane proteins are synthesized as preproteins with cleavable presequences. Opposing mechanisms of preprotein insertion into the membrane have been debated: stop-transfer with arrest in the inner membrane versus conservative sorting via the matrix. We dissected the membrane insertion of a multispanning ABC transporter. The N-terminal membrane domain was laterally released from the presequence translocase of the inner membrane (TIM23 complex) by a stop-transfer mechanism, whereas the subsequent domain was imported via the matrix heat-shock protein 70 (mtHsp70) motor and exported by the oxidase assembly (OXA) translocase. These observations lead to an unexpected solution to the controversial debate about mitochondrial preprotein sorting. Stop-transfer and conservative sorting are not mutually exclusive pathways but represent sorting mechanisms that cooperate in the membrane integration of a protein with complex topology. We conclude that the multispanning protein is inserted in a modular manner by the coordinated action of two inner-membrane preprotein translocases.


Cell Metabolism | 2015

Central role of mic10 in the mitochondrial contact site and cristae organizing system

Maria Bohnert; Ralf M. Zerbes; Karen M. Davies; Alexander W. Mühleip; Heike Rampelt; Susanne E. Horvath; Thorina Boenke; Anita M. Kram; Inge Perschil; Marten Veenhuis; Werner Kühlbrandt; Ida J. van der Klei; Nikolaus Pfanner; Martin van der Laan

The mitochondrial contact site and cristae organizing system (MICOS) is a conserved multi-subunit complex crucial for maintaining the characteristic architecture of mitochondria. Studies with deletion mutants identified Mic10 and Mic60 as core subunits of MICOS. Mic60 has been studied in detail; however, topogenesis and function of Mic10 are unknown. We report that targeting of Mic10 to the mitochondrial inner membrane requires a positively charged internal loop, but no cleavable presequence. Both transmembrane segments of Mic10 carry a characteristic four-glycine motif, which has been found in the ring-forming rotor subunit of F1Fo-ATP synthases. Overexpression of Mic10 profoundly alters the architecture of the inner membrane independently of other MICOS components. The four-glycine motifs are dispensable for interaction of Mic10 with other MICOS subunits but are crucial for the formation of large Mic10 oligomers. Our studies identify a unique role of Mic10 oligomers in promoting the formation of inner membrane crista junctions.


Cell Reports | 2017

Definition of a High-Confidence Mitochondrial Proteome at Quantitative Scale

Marcel Morgenstern; Sebastian B. Stiller; Philipp Lübbert; Christian D. Peikert; Stefan Dannenmaier; Friedel Drepper; Uri Weill; Philipp Höß; Reinhild Feuerstein; Michael Gebert; Maria Bohnert; Martin van der Laan; Maya Schuldiner; Conny Schütze; Silke Oeljeklaus; Nikolaus Pfanner; Nils Wiedemann; Bettina Warscheid

Summary Mitochondria perform central functions in cellular bioenergetics, metabolism, and signaling, and their dysfunction has been linked to numerous diseases. The available studies cover only part of the mitochondrial proteome, and a separation of core mitochondrial proteins from associated fractions has not been achieved. We developed an integrative experimental approach to define the proteome of east mitochondria. We classified > 3,300 proteins of mitochondria and mitochondria-associated fractions and defined 901 high-confidence mitochondrial proteins, expanding the set of mitochondrial proteins by 82. Our analysis includes protein abundance under fermentable and nonfermentable growth, submitochondrial localization, single-protein experiments, and subcellular classification of mitochondria-associated fractions. We identified mitochondrial interactors of respiratory chain supercomplexes, ATP synthase, AAA proteases, the mitochondrial contact site and cristae organizing system (MICOS), and the coenzyme Q biosynthesis cluster, as well as mitochondrial proteins with dual cellular localization. The integrative proteome provides a high-confidence source for the characterization of physiological and pathophysiological functions of mitochondria and their integration into the cellular environment.

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Maya Schuldiner

Weizmann Institute of Science

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