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Article Dans Une Revue Biochimie Année : 2014

Idiosyncrasies in decoding mitochondrial genomes.

Résumé

Mitochondria originate from the α-proteobacterial domain of life. Since this unique event occurred, mitochondrial genomes of protozoans, fungi, plants and metazoans have highly derived and diverged away from the common ancestral DNA. Present-day mitochondrial DNAs have a very reduced coding capacity. These genomes highly differ between them. Strikingly however, ATP production coupled to electron transport and translation of mitochondrial proteins are the two common functions retained in all mitochondrial DNAs. Paradoxically, most components essential for these two functions are now expressed from nuclear genes. Understanding how mitochondrial translation evolved in various eukaryotic models is essential to acquire new knowledge of mitochondrial genome expression. In this review, we provide a thorough analysis of the idiosyncrasies of mitochondrial translation as they occur between organisms. We address this by looking at mitochondrial codon usage and tRNA content. Then, we look at the aminoacyl-tRNA-forming enzymes in terms of peculiarities, dual origin, and alternate function(s). Finally we show examples of the atypical structural properties of mitochondrial tRNAs found in some organisms and the resulting adaptive tRNA-protein partnership.

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Dates et versions

hal-02918641 , version 1 (20-08-2020)

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J Huot, Ludovic Enkler, Cyrille Megel, Loukmane Karim, Daphné Laporte, et al.. Idiosyncrasies in decoding mitochondrial genomes.. Biochimie, 2014, 100, pp.95-106. ⟨10.1016/j.biochi.2014.01.004⟩. ⟨hal-02918641⟩
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