Paula Clemente
Spanish National Research Council
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Paula Clemente.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Flavia Fontanesi; Paula Clemente; Antoni Barrientos
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COX) biogenesis is translationally regulated. Mss51, a specific COX1 mRNA translational activator and Cox1 chaperone, drives the regulatory mechanism. During translation and post-translationally, newly synthesized Cox1 physically interacts with a complex of proteins involving Ssc1, Mss51, and Cox14, which eventually hand over Cox1 to the assembly pathway. This step is probably catalyzed by assembly chaperones such as Shy1 in a process coupled to the release of Ssc1-Mss51 from the complex. Impaired COX assembly results in the trapping of Mss51 in the complex, thus limiting its availability for COX1 mRNA translation. An exception is a null mutation in COX14 that does not affect Cox1 synthesis because the Mss51 trapping complexes become unstable, and Mss51 is readily available for translation. Here we present evidence showing that Cox25 is a new essential COX assembly factor that plays some roles similar to Cox14. A null mutation in COX25 by itself or in combination with other COX mutations does not affect Cox1 synthesis. Cox25 is an inner mitochondrial membrane intrinsic protein with a hydrophilic C terminus protruding into the matrix. Cox25 is an essential component of the complexes containing newly synthesized Cox1, Ssc1, Mss51, and Cox14. In addition, Cox25 is also found to interact with Shy1 and Cox5 in a complex that does not contain Mss51. These results suggest that once Ssc1-Mss51 are released from the Cox1 stabilization complex, Cox25 continues to interact with Cox14 and Cox1 to facilitate the formation of multisubunit COX assembly intermediates.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Paula Clemente; Susana Peralta; Alberto Cruz-Bermúdez; Lucía Echevarría; Flavia Fontanesi; Antoni Barrientos; Miguel Ángel Fernández-Moreno; Rafael Garesse
Background: Assembly of cytochrome c oxidase (COX), complex IV of the respiratory chain, requires a great number of accessory proteins known as assembly factors. Results: hCOA3 interacts with newly synthesized COX1 and promotes its assembly with subsequent COX subunits. Conclusion: hCOA3 participates in COX biogenesis in humans. Significance: hCOA3 is a new candidate gene to screen in patients with COX deficiency. Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) or complex IV of the mitochondrial respiratory chain plays a fundamental role in energy production of aerobic cells. In humans, COX deficiency is the most frequent cause of mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. Human COX is composed of 13 subunits of dual genetic origin, whose assembly requires an increasing number of nuclear-encoded accessory proteins known as assembly factors. Here, we have identified and characterized human CCDC56, an 11.7-kDa mitochondrial transmembrane protein, as a new factor essential for COX biogenesis. CCDC56 shares sequence similarity with the yeast COX assembly factor Coa3 and was termed hCOA3. hCOA3-silenced cells display a severe COX functional alteration owing to a decreased stability of newly synthesized COX1 and an impairment in the holoenzyme assembly process. We show that hCOA3 physically interacts with both the mitochondrial translation machinery and COX structural subunits. We conclude that hCOA3 stabilizes COX1 co-translationally and promotes its assembly with COX partner subunits. Finally, our results identify hCOA3 as a new candidate when screening for genes responsible for mitochondrial diseases associated with COX deficiency.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Paula Clemente; Susana Peralta; Alberto Cruz-Bermudez; Lucia Echevarria; Flavia Fontanesi; Antoni Barrientos; Miguel Ángel Fernández-Moreno; Rafael Garesse
Background: Assembly of cytochrome c oxidase (COX), complex IV of the respiratory chain, requires a great number of accessory proteins known as assembly factors. Results: hCOA3 interacts with newly synthesized COX1 and promotes its assembly with subsequent COX subunits. Conclusion: hCOA3 participates in COX biogenesis in humans. Significance: hCOA3 is a new candidate gene to screen in patients with COX deficiency. Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) or complex IV of the mitochondrial respiratory chain plays a fundamental role in energy production of aerobic cells. In humans, COX deficiency is the most frequent cause of mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. Human COX is composed of 13 subunits of dual genetic origin, whose assembly requires an increasing number of nuclear-encoded accessory proteins known as assembly factors. Here, we have identified and characterized human CCDC56, an 11.7-kDa mitochondrial transmembrane protein, as a new factor essential for COX biogenesis. CCDC56 shares sequence similarity with the yeast COX assembly factor Coa3 and was termed hCOA3. hCOA3-silenced cells display a severe COX functional alteration owing to a decreased stability of newly synthesized COX1 and an impairment in the holoenzyme assembly process. We show that hCOA3 physically interacts with both the mitochondrial translation machinery and COX structural subunits. We conclude that hCOA3 stabilizes COX1 co-translationally and promotes its assembly with COX partner subunits. Finally, our results identify hCOA3 as a new candidate when screening for genes responsible for mitochondrial diseases associated with COX deficiency.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Susana Peralta; Paula Clemente; Alvaro Sanchez-Martinez; Manuel Calleja; Rosana Hernández-Sierra; Yuichi Matsushima; Cristina Adán; Cristina Ugalde; Miguel Ángel Fernández-Moreno; Laurie S. Kaguni; Rafael Garesse
Background: Cytochrome c oxidase (COX), the final enzyme of the mitochondrial electron transport chain, requires several assembly factors for its proper function. Results: ccdc56 knock-out flies showed developmental delay, lethality, and a dramatic decrease in the levels/activity of COX. Conclusion: CCDC56 protein is necessary for COX function and for viability in flies. Significance: Drosophila CCDC56 is a novel putative COX assembly factor conserved in humans. In Drosophila melanogaster, the mitochondrial transcription factor B1 (d-mtTFB1) transcript contains in its 5′-untranslated region a conserved upstream open reading frame denoted as CG42630 in FlyBase. We demonstrate that CG42630 encodes a novel protein, the coiled coil domain-containing protein 56 (CCDC56), conserved in metazoans. We show that Drosophila CCDC56 protein localizes to mitochondria and contains 87 amino acids in flies and 106 in humans with the two proteins sharing 42% amino acid identity. We show by rapid amplification of cDNA ends and Northern blotting that Drosophila CCDC56 protein and mtTFB1 are encoded on a bona fide bicistronic transcript. We report the generation and characterization of two ccdc56 knock-out lines in Drosophila carrying the ccdc56D6 and ccdc56D11 alleles. Lack of the CCDC56 protein in flies induces a developmental delay and 100% lethality by arrest of larval development at the third instar. ccdc56 knock-out larvae show a significant decrease in the level of fully assembled cytochrome c oxidase (COX) and in its activity, suggesting a defect in complex assembly; the activity of the other oxidative phosphorylation complexes remained either unaffected or increased in the ccdc56 knock-out larvae. The lethal phenotype and the decrease in COX were partially rescued by reintroduction of a wild-type UAS-ccdc56 transgene. These results indicate an important role for CCDC56 in the oxidative phosphorylation system and in particular in COX function required for proper development in D. melanogaster. We propose CCDC56 as a candidate factor required for COX biogenesis/assembly.
Biochimie | 2013
Carmen G. Vallejo; Alberto Cruz-Bermúdez; Paula Clemente; Rosana Hernández-Sierra; Rafael Garesse; Miguel Quintanilla
Metabolic reprogramming from mitochondrial aerobic respiration to aerobic glycolysis is a hallmark of cancer. However, whether it is caused by a dysfunction in the oxidative phosphorylation pathway is still under debate. In this work, we have analyzed the bioenergetic cellular (BEC) index and the relative cell ability to grow in the presence of either galactose or glucose as sources of sugar (Gal/Glu index) of a system formed by four epidermal cell lines with increasing tumorigenic potentials, ranging from nontumorigenic to highly malignant. We find that the BEC index gradually decreases whereas the Gal/Glu index increases with tumorigenicity, indicating that a progressive metabolic adaptation to aerobic glycolysis occurs in tumor cells associated with malignancy. Interestingly, this metabolic adaptation does not appear to be caused by damaged respiration, since the expression and activity of components of the respiratory chain complexes were unchanged in the cell lines. Moreover, the corresponding mitochondrial ATP synthetic abilities of the cell lines were found similar. The production of reactive oxygen species was also measured. A shift in ROS generation was found when compared nontumorigenic with tumorigenic cell lines, the latter exhibiting about threefold higher ROS levels than nontumorigenic cells. This result indicates that oxidative stress is an early event during tumor progression.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2006
Alvaro Sanchez-Martinez; Ningguang Luo; Paula Clemente; Cristina Adán; Rosana Hernández-Sierra; Pilar Ochoa; Miguel Ángel Fernández-Moreno; Laurie S. Kaguni; Rafael Garesse
Biochemical Journal | 2014
Lucía Echevarría; Paula Clemente; Rosana Hernández-Sierra; María Esther Gallardo; Miguel Ángel Fernández-Moreno; Rafael Garesse
Biochemistry | 2016
José L. Neira; Sergio Martínez-Rodríguez; José G. Hernández-Cifre; Ana Cámara-Artigas; Paula Clemente; Susana Peralta; Miguel Ángel Fernández-Moreno; Rafael Garesse; José García de la Torre; Bruno Rizzuti
Archive | 2010
Lucía Echevarría; Alvaro Sanchez-Martinez; Paula Clemente; Rosana Hernández-Sierra; Miguel Ángel Fernández-Moreno; Rafael Garesse
Archive | 2011
Flavia Fontanesi; Paula Clemente; Antoni Barrientos