J Biol Chem, Vol. 274, Issue 10, 6265-6271, March 5, 1999
Mitochondrial Gene Expression Is Regulated at the Level of
Transcription during Early Embryogenesis of Xenopus
laevis
Chandramohan V.
Ammini
and
William W.
Hauswirth
§
From the Departments of
Molecular Genetics and
Microbiology and § Ophthalmology, University of Florida,
Gainesville, Florida 32610
Mitochondrial transcription in the early
Xenopus laevis embryo resumes several hours before active
mtDNA replication, effectively decoupling mtDNA transcription and
replication. This developmental feature makes Xenopus
embryogenesis an appealing model system to investigate the regulation
of mitochondrial transcription. Studies reported here refine our
understanding of the timing, magnitude, and mechanism of this
transcriptional induction event. Northern analyses of six mitochondrial
mRNAs (normalized to mtDNA) reveal that transcript levels remain
basal between fertilization and gastrulation and then undergo a
coordinate induction, culminating in a 20-28-fold increase over egg
levels by 48 h of development. Measurement of mitochondrial run-on
transcription rates demonstrates a good correlation between
transcription rates and transcript levels, showing that transcription
itself is the primary determinant of transcript abundance. Experimental
increases in mitochondrial ATP and energy charge also correlate with
patterns of transcript levels and transcription rates, suggesting that
developmental changes in the biochemical composition of the
mitochondrial matrix could be regulating transcriptional activity.
Consistent with this idea, transcriptional run-on rates in mitochondria
of early embryos can be stimulated by the addition of tricarboxylic
acid cycle intermediates to the run-on reaction. However, mitochondria of later stages do not show this response to the addition of
metabolite. In combination, these data suggest that mitochondrial
transcription is under metabolic regulation during early
Xenopus embryogenesis.
Copyright © 1999 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.