Publication:
A Key Role of the EMC Complex for Mitochondrial Respiration and Quiescence in Fission Yeasts

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Publication date

Reading date

Event date

Start date of the public exhibition period

End date of the public exhibition period

Advisors

Authors of photography

Person who provides the photography

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

In eukaryotes, oxygen consumption is mainly driven by the respiratory activity of mitochondria, which generates most of the cellular energy that sustains life. This parameter provides direct information about mitochondrial activity of all aerobic biological systems. Using the Seahorse analyzer instrument, we show here that deletion of the oca3/emc2 gene (oca3Δ) encoding the Emc2 subunit of the ER membrane complex (EMC), a conserved chaperone/insertase that aids membrane protein biogenesis in the ER, severely affects oxygen consumption rates and quiescence survival in Schizosaccharomyces pombe yeast cells. Remarkably, the respiratory defect of the oca3Δ mutation (EMC dysfunction) is rescued synergistically by disruption of ergosterol biosynthesis (erg5Δ) and the action of the membrane fluidizing agent tween 20, suggesting a direct role of membrane fluidity and sterol composition in mitochondrial respiration in the fission yeast.

Doctoral program

Related publication

Research projects

Description

Proyectos de investigación PID2019‐111124GB‐I00

Bibliographic reference

Yeast . 2025 Apr;42(4):96-103

Photography rights