Publication | Open Access
The evolution of MICOS: Ancestral and derived functions and interactions
47
Citations
30
References
2015
Year
Mitochondrial CristaeMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsSynapsidaPhylogeneticsMitochondrial BiogenesisProkaryotic SystemMitochondrial DynamicMitochondrial Contact SiteOrganellar BiologyStructural BiologyCristae Organizing SystemBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyProtein EvolutionCellular BiochemistryChemical EvolutionMedicineOrganelle Dynamic
The MItochondrial Contact Site and Cristae Organizing System (MICOS) is required for the biogenesis and maintenance of mitochondrial cristae as well as the proper tethering of the mitochondrial inner and outer membranes. We recently demonstrated that the core components of MICOS, Mic10 and Mic60, are near-ubiquitous eukaryotic features inferred to have been present in the last eukaryote common ancestor. We also showed that Mic60 could be traced to α-proteobacteria, which suggests that mitochondrial cristae evolved from α-proteobacterial intracytoplasmic membranes. Here, we extend our evolutionary analysis to MICOS-interacting proteins (e.g., Sam50, Mia40, DNAJC11, DISC-1, QIL1, Aim24, and Cox17) and discuss the implications for both derived and ancestral functions of MICOS.
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