Hypoxia and intra-complex genetic suppressors rescue complex I mutants by a shared mechanism

Joshua D. Meisel, Maria Miranda, Owen S. Skinner, Presli P. Wiesenthal, Sandra M. Wellner, Alexis A. Jourdain, Gary Ruvkun*, Vamsi K. Mootha*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)
6 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The electron transport chain (ETC) of mitochondria, bacteria, and archaea couples electron flow to proton pumping and is adapted to diverse oxygen environments. Remarkably, in mice, neurological disease due to ETC complex I dysfunction is rescued by hypoxia through unknown mechanisms. Here, we show that hypoxia rescue and hyperoxia sensitivity of complex I deficiency are evolutionarily conserved to C. elegans and are specific to mutants that compromise the electron-conducting matrix arm. We show that hypoxia rescue does not involve the hypoxia-inducible factor pathway or attenuation of reactive oxygen species. To discover the mechanism, we use C. elegans genetic screens to identify suppressor mutations in the complex I accessory subunit NDUFA6/nuo-3 that phenocopy hypoxia rescue. We show that NDUFA6/nuo-3(G60D) or hypoxia directly restores complex I forward activity, with downstream rescue of ETC flux and, in some cases, complex I levels. Additional screens identify residues within the ubiquinone binding pocket as being required for the rescue by NDUFA6/nuo-3(G60D) or hypoxia. This reveals oxygen-sensitive coupling between an accessory subunit and the quinone binding pocket of complex I that can restore forward activity in the same manner as hypoxia.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCell
Volume187
Issue number3
Number of pages36
ISSN0092-8674
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s)

Keywords

  • C. elegans
  • complex I
  • electron transport chain
  • hyperoxia
  • hypoxia
  • mitochondria
  • NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
  • NDUFA6
  • NDUFS4
  • oxygen

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