Pathogenic human mitochondrial tRNA variants impair RNA processing by compromising 5′ leader removal

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Abstract

ABSTRACT Human mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) encodes multiple proteins in the oxidative phosphorylation complexes as well as the ribosomal and transfer RNAs (tRNAs) needed for in situ translation. These genes are transcribed from only three promoters, producing polycistronic transcripts that are co-transcriptionally cleaved by mitochondrial RNase enzymes to release majority of individual gene products. tRNAs separate many of these genes and are thought to serve as “punctuation” marks that enable RNase recognition, binding, and hydrolysis of the 5′ “leader” and 3′ “trailer” sequences flanking the tRNA. Mutations in the tRNA genes dominate the mtDNA-linked mitochondrial pathologies; yet a systematic study of the impact of tRNA sequence variation on the RNase-catalyzed processing is lacking. Here, we employed human mitochondrial tRNA Tyr as a model system to dissect the effect of tRNA variants on the in vitro 5′ leader and 3′ trailer hydrolysis. We found that nucleotide variations located near the catalytic interfaces – particularly within or near the tRNA acceptor stem – showed the strongest defects in 5′ processing and prevented release of the downstream tRNA in a tRNA cluster where multiple tRNAs are transcribed in tandem. This work provides mechanistic insight into how mutations disrupt coordinated mitochondrial tRNA processing and establish a framework for predicting variant effects based on their structural position relative to the processing enzymes.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00