Date published: 2025-11-24

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MRP-S35 Inhibitors

Chemical inhibitors of MRP-S35 function by disrupting various stages of the mitochondrial protein synthesis process, which is essential for the maintenance of mitochondrial function and energy production. Oligomycin acts by inhibiting the mitochondrial ATP synthase, a key enzyme in the production of ATP, which is necessary for all cellular processes, including mitochondrial protein synthesis. Its inhibition leads to a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, which is crucial for the function of MRP-S35 in the translation machinery. Chloramphenicol and erythromycin have a direct impact on the mitochondrial ribosomes, which share similarities with bacterial ribosomes. Chloramphenicol binds to the peptidyl transferase component, impeding the formation of peptide bonds between amino acids, while erythromycin blocks the translocation step on the 50S subunit, both leading to an inhibition of protein synthesis where MRP-S35 operates. Other inhibitors, like tetracycline, bind to the 30S subunit, which can impede the attachment of aminoacyl-tRNA to the A site of the ribosome. Fusidic acid, although primarily targeting bacterial protein synthesis, can prevent the release of elongation factor G from the ribosome, which is necessary for the translocation of ribosomes along the mRNA. Cycloheximide, known for inhibiting eukaryotic ribosomes, can also affect mitochondrial ribosomes, thereby impeding the function of MRP-S35. Puromycin causes premature chain termination by acting as an aminoacyl-tRNA mimic, leading to the release of incomplete polypeptide chains. Dactinomycin, by intercalating into DNA, inhibits RNA synthesis, which is necessary for the production of mRNAs that are translated by mitochondrial ribosomes involving MRP-S35. Anisomycin inhibits the peptidyl transferase activity, which is vital for protein elongation in the mitochondria. Ricin inactivates ribosomes by depurinating rRNA, which can halt mitochondrial protein synthesis. Emetine blocks the movement of the ribosome along mRNA, leading to an inhibition of the translation process that involves MRP-S35. Lastly, zidovudine interferes with mitochondrial DNA replication, which can indirectly affect the synthesis of mitochondrial-encoded proteins that require the function of MRP-S35. Each of these inhibitors can interfere with the mitochondrial protein synthesis pathway at different stages, resulting in the inhibition of MRP-S35 function.

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