Acute Depression of Mitochondrial Protein Synthesis during Anoxia
CONTRIBUTIONS OF OXYGEN SENSING, MATRIX ACIDIFICATION, AND REDOX STATE (*)
- From the (1)Department of Environmental, Population, and Organismic Biology and the
- (2)Graduate Program in Molecular Biophysics, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0334
- ¶To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 303-492-6180; Fax: 303-492-8699; Hands{at}spot.colorado.edu.
Abstract
Mitochondrial protein synthesis is acutely depressed during anoxia-induced quiescence in embryos of Artemia franciscana. Oxygen deprivation is accompanied in vivo by a dramatic drop in extramitochondrial pH, and both of these alterations strongly inhibit protein synthesis in isolated
mitochondria. Here we show that the oxygen dependence is not explained simply by blockage of the electron transport chain
or by the increased redox state. Whereas oxygen deprivation substantially depressed protein synthesis within 5 min and resulted
in a 77% reduction after 1 h, aerobic incubations with saturating concentrations of cyanide or antimycin A had little effect
during the first 20 min and only a modest effect after 1 h (36 and 20% reductions, respectively). Yet the mitochondrial NAD(P)H
pools were fully reduced after 2-3 min with all three treatments. This cyanide- and antimycin-insensitive but hypoxia-sensitive
pattern of protein synthesis depression suggests the presence of a molecular oxygen sensor within the mitochondrion. Second,
we show for the first time that acidification of extramitochondrial pH exerts inhibition on protein synthesis specifically
through changes in matrix pH. Matrix pH was 8.2 during protein synthesis assays performed at the extramitochondrial pH optimum
of 7.5. When this proton gradient was abolished with nigericin, the extramitochondrial pH optimum for protein synthesis displayed
an alkaline shift of
0.7 pH unit. These data suggest the presence of proton-sensitive translational components within the mitochondrion.
Footnotes
-
↵* This work was supported by an Environmental, Population, and Organismic Biology Fellowship from the University of Colorado (to K. E. K.) and National Science Foundation Grant IBN-9306652 (to S. C. H.). The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
-
↵1 The abbreviation used is:
- BCECF
-
2′-7′-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)- 5-carboxyfluorescein.
-
↵2K. E. Kwast, T. J. Anchordoguy, and S. C. Hand, unpublished results.
-
- Received November 16, 1995.
- Revision received January 8, 1996.
- © 1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











