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Trypanosome Letm1 protein is essential for mitochondrial potassium homeostasis.
[wolf-hirschhorn syndrome]
Letm
1
is
a
conserved
protein
in
eukaryotes
bearing
energized
mitochondria
.
Hemizygous
deletion
of
its
gene
has
been
implicated
in
symptoms
of
the
human
disease
Wolf-
Hirschhorn
syndrome
.
Studies
almost
exclusively
performed
in
opisthokonts
have
attributed
several
roles
to
Letm
1
,
including
maintaining
mitochondrial
morphology
,
mediating
either
calcium
or
potassium
/
proton
antiport
,
and
facilitating
mitochondrial
translation
.
We
address
the
ancestral
function
of
Letm
1
in
the
highly
diverged
protist
and
significant
pathogen
,
Trypanosoma
brucei
.
We
demonstrate
that
Letm
1
is
involved
in
maintaining
mitochondrial
volume
via
potassium
/
proton
exchange
across
the
inner
membrane
.
This
role
is
essential
in
the
vector-dwelling
procyclic
and
mammal-infecting
bloodstream
stages
as
well
as
in
Trypanosoma
brucei
evansi
,
a
form
of
the
latter
stage
lacking
an
organellar
genome
.
In
the
pathogenic
bloodstream
stage
,
the
mitochondrion
consumes
ATP
to
maintain
an
energized
state
,
whereas
that
of
T
.
brucei
evansi
also
lacks
a
conventional
proton-driven
membrane
potential
.
Thus
,
Letm
1
performs
its
function
in
different
physiological
states
,
suggesting
that
ion
homeostasis
is
among
the
few
characterized
essential
pathways
of
the
mitochondrion
at
this
T
.
brucei
life
stage
.
Interestingly
,
Letm
1
depletion
in
the
procyclic
stage
can
be
complemented
by
exogenous
expression
of
its
human
counterpart
,
highlighting
the
conservation
of
protein
function
between
highly
divergent
species
.
Furthermore
,
although
mitochondrial
translation
is
affected
upon
Letm
1
ablation
,
it
is
an
indirect
consequence
of
K
(
+
)
accumulation
in
the
matrix
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"mitochondrial translation"
symptom
wolf-hirschhorn syndrome
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