bims-tricox Biomed News
on Translation, ribosomes and COX
Issue of 2025–11–30
two papers selected by
Yash Verma, Universität Zürich



  1. bioRxiv. 2025 Oct 14. pii: 2025.10.13.682092. [Epub ahead of print]
      Mitochondrial biogenesis requires the import of ∼1,000-1,500 nuclear-encoded proteins across the Translocase of Outer Membrane (TOM) and the Translocase of Inner Membrane (TIM) 22 or 23 complexes. Protein import defects cannot only impair mitochondrial respiration but also cause mitochondrial Precursor Overaccumulation Stress (mPOS) in the cytosol. Recent studies showed that specific mutations in the nuclear-encoded Adenine Nucleotide Translocase 1 (ANT1) cause musculoskeletal and neurological diseases by clogging TOM and TIM22 and inducing mPOS. Here, we found that overexpression of MFB1 , encoding the mitochondrial F-box protein 1, suppresses cell growth defect caused by a clogger allele of AAC2 , the yeast homolog of Ant1. Disruption of MFB1 synergizes with a clogger allele of aac2 to inhibit cell growth. This is accompanied by increased retention of mitochondrial proteins in the cytosol, suggesting exacerbated defect in mitochondrial protein import. Proximity-dependent biotin identification (BioID) suggested that Mfb1 interacts with several mitochondrial surface proteins including Tom22, a component of the TOM complex. Loss of MFB1 under clogging conditions activates genes encoding cytosolic chaperones including HSP31 . Interestingly, disruption of HSP31 creates a synthetic lethality with protein import clogging under respiring conditions. We propose that Mfb1 functions to maintain mitochondrial protein import competency under clogging conditions, whereas Hsp31 plays an important role in protecting the cytosol against mPOS. Mutations in DJ-1, the human homolog of Hsp31, and mitochondria-associated F-box proteins (eg., Fbxo7) are known to cause early-onset Parkinson's disease. Our work may help to better understand how these mutations affect cellular proteostasis and cause neurodegeneration.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.10.13.682092
  2. bioRxiv. 2025 Oct 29. pii: 2025.10.29.685433. [Epub ahead of print]
      Errors in ribosome assembly can produce defective subunits that can lead to aberrant translation events. How faulty ribosomes are recognized and whether they are recognized during assembly or translation remains poorly understood. We utilized a mutation in the ribosomal protein uL16 to track defective 60S subunits through the biogenesis and translation pathways. This mutation deletes a critical loop in the P site and arrests pre- 60S particles during late cytoplasmic maturation. However, simultaneous mutations in the late biogenesis factors Nmd3 and Tif6 bypass this block, releasing defective ribosomes into the translational pool. Cryo-EM and selective ribosome profiling reveal that these ribosomes can form peptide bonds, but stall predominantly at the first few codons. We show that the uL16 mutant ribosomes are detected and targeted for degradation during biogenesis and that they escape degradation if they enter translation. We identify Reh1 as a non-canonical ribosome assembly factor that is required for this surveillance pathway.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.10.29.685433