I notice a good deal of this discussion occured over a year ago and I am curious to see if there has been any new evidence that may help settle the debate on whether or not AE need be concerned with any potential redox sensing function performed by the mtDNA? It still seems to me to be a matter of scientific judgement whether or not the "correct" stochiometry can be maintained with all the mito genes in the nucleus. By "correct" I mean that not only are they produced in the proper amounts relative to each-other, but also in the correct total amount to allow for optimal fuction of the many processes the mitochondria carries out.
Prometheus main point seems to be that it is possible that the mito genes that remained in the organelle need to be there to sense the redox state in order to produce the correct number of their own products. And that this information about the amounts that were produced in the mitochondria is then relayed on an unknown signaling pathway to the nucleus so that the genes there can produce the appropriate amount of their products to match the products produced in the mitochondria. If you move ALL the genes to the nucleus then you would lose that redox sensing function which could throw off the entire mitochodrial protein production system. That system could be critically dependent on at least some of those genes being right where they are sensing the redox state, producing the correct amount of their own transcripts, and somehow conveying the relative amounts of their transcipt to the nucleus so that the 1:1 stochiometry can be perserved. Forgive me if I've mis-spoken about your view point, but it is my quick summary of what I see your view as.
Aubrey seems to think that any regulation similar to what I summarised above is on the low end of the scale of biological probability. Prometheus seems to think it is on the high end. I am not sure. Is anyone aware of any new information or studies that could shed more light on how exactly the 1:1 stochiometry is currently maintained. I know the engineers approach is to not care how it works as long as it works. But there seems to be at least a plausible arguement that the remaining Mt genes could still be there because they perform a critical function. Key word there being critical, it could also turn out that the mtDNA still being in the organelle plays only a minor function or no function at all.
Marcus
Edited by marcus, 12 September 2006 - 07:49 AM.