Structural basis of mitochondrial membrane bending by the I-II-III2-IV2 supercomplex.

Mühleip A, Flygaard RK, Baradaran R, Haapanen O, Gruhl T, Tobiasson V, Maréchal A, Sharma V, Amunts A

Nature 615 (7954) 934-938 [2023-03-00; online 2023-03-22]

Mitochondrial energy conversion requires an intricate architecture of the inner mitochondrial membrane1. Here we show that a supercomplex containing all four respiratory chain components contributes to membrane curvature induction in ciliates. We report cryo-electron microscopy and cryo-tomography structures of the supercomplex that comprises 150 different proteins and 311 bound lipids, forming a stable 5.8-MDa assembly. Owing to subunit acquisition and extension, complex I associates with a complex IV dimer, generating a wedge-shaped gap that serves as a binding site for complex II. Together with a tilted complex III dimer association, it results in a curved membrane region. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that the divergent supercomplex actively contributes to the membrane curvature induction and tubulation of cristae. Our findings highlight how the evolution of protein subunits of respiratory complexes has led to the I-II-III2-IV2 supercomplex that contributes to the shaping of the bioenergetic membrane, thereby enabling its functional specialization.

Alexey Amunts

SciLifeLab Fellow

PubMed 36949187

DOI 10.1038/s41586-023-05817-y

Crossref 10.1038/s41586-023-05817-y

pmc: PMC10060162
pii: 10.1038/s41586-023-05817-y


Publications 9.5.0