Co-reporter:Geng Wang;Eriko Shimada;Jin Zhang;Jason S. Hong;Geoffrey M. Smith;Michael A. Teitell
PNAS 2012 109 (13 ) pp:4840-4845
Publication Date(Web):2012-03-27
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1116792109
Mutations in the human mitochondrial genome are implicated in neuromuscular diseases, metabolic defects, and aging. An efficient
and simple mechanism for neutralizing deleterious mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) alterations has unfortunately remained elusive.
Here, we report that a 20-ribonucleotide stem-loop sequence from the H1 RNA, the RNA component of the human RNase P enzyme, appended to a nonimported RNA directs the import of the resultant RNA
fusion transcript into human mitochondria. The methodology is effective for both noncoding RNAs, such as tRNAs, and mRNAs.
The RNA import component, polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPASE), facilitates transfer of this hybrid RNA into the mitochondrial
matrix. In addition, nucleus-encoded mRNAs for mitochondrial proteins, such as the mRNA of human mitochondrial ribosomal protein
S12 (MRPS12), contain regulatory sequences in their 3′-untranslated region (UTR) that confers localization to the mitochondrial outer
membrane, which is postulated to aid in protein translocation after translation. We show that for some mitochondrial-encoded
transcripts, such as COX2, a 3′-UTR localization sequence is not required for mRNA import, whereas for corrective mitochondrial-encoded tRNAs, appending
the 3′-UTR localization sequence was essential for efficient fusion-transcript translocation into mitochondria. In vivo, functional
defects in mitochondrial RNA (mtRNA) translation and cell respiration were reversed in two human disease lines. Thus, this
study indicates that a wide range of RNAs can be targeted to mitochondria by appending a targeting sequence that interacts
with PNPASE, with or without a mitochondrial localization sequence, providing an exciting, general approach for overcoming
mitochondrial genetic disorders.