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Intermembrane Space Proteome of Yeast Mitochondria
Authors:F.-Nora V?gtle  Julia M. Burkhart  Sanjana Rao  Carolin Gerbeth  Jens Hinrichs  Jean-Claude Martinou  Agnieszka Chacinska  Albert Sickmann  René P. Zahedi  Chris Meisinger
Affiliation:3. Institut für Biochemie und Molekularbiologie, ZBMZ, Universität Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany;;5. Leibniz-Institut für Analytische Wissenschaften - ISAS - e.V., Dortmund, Germany;;6. Faculty of Biology, Universität Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany;;12. International Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, 02-109 Warsaw, Poland;;8. Medizinisches Proteom-Center (MPC), Ruhr-Universität, Bochum, Germany;;10. BIOSS Centre for Biological Signalling Studies, Universität Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany
Abstract:The intermembrane space (IMS) represents the smallest subcompartment of mitochondria. Nevertheless, it plays important roles in the transport and modification of proteins, lipids, and metal ions and in the regulation and assembly of the respiratory chain complexes. Moreover, it is involved in many redox processes and coordinates key steps in programmed cell death. A comprehensive profiling of IMS proteins has not been performed so far. We have established a method that uses the proapoptotic protein Bax to release IMS proteins from isolated mitochondria, and we profiled the protein composition of this compartment. Using stable isotope-labeled mitochondria from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we were able to measure specific Bax-dependent protein release and distinguish between quantitatively released IMS proteins and the background efflux of matrix proteins. From the known 31 soluble IMS proteins, 29 proteins were reproducibly identified, corresponding to a coverage of >90%. In addition, we found 20 novel intermembrane space proteins, out of which 10 had not been localized to mitochondria before. Many of these novel IMS proteins have unknown functions or have been reported to play a role in redox regulation. We confirmed IMS localization for 15 proteins using in organello import, protease accessibility upon osmotic swelling, and Bax-release assays. Moreover, we identified two novel mitochondrial proteins, Ymr244c-a (Coa6) and Ybl107c (Mic23), as substrates of the MIA import pathway that have unusual cysteine motifs and found the protein phosphatase Ptc5 to be a novel substrate of the inner membrane protease (IMP). For Coa6 we discovered a role as a novel assembly factor of the cytochrome c oxidase complex. We present here the first and comprehensive proteome of IMS proteins of yeast mitochondria with 51 proteins in total. The IMS proteome will serve as a valuable source for further studies on the role of the IMS in cell life and death.Mitochondria are double-membrane-bound organelles that fulfill a multitude of important cellular functions. Proteomic analysis of purified mitochondria revealed that they contain approximately 1000 (yeast) to 1500 (human) different proteins (13). However, the distribution of these proteins among the four mitochondrial subcompartments (outer membrane, inner membrane, matrix, and intermembrane space) has been only marginally studied through global approaches. This is attributed to the high complexity of purifying submitochondrial fractions to a grade suitable for proteomic analysis. The best-studied submitochondrial proteomes comprise the outer membranes of S. cerevisae, N. crassa, and A. thaliana (46). The mitochondrial intermembrane space (IMS)1 represents a highly interesting compartment for several reasons: it provides a redox active space that promotes oxidation of cysteine residues similar to the endoplasmic reticulum and the bacterial periplasm, but unlike cytosol, nucleus, or the mitochondrial matrix where the presence of thioredoxins or glutaredoxins prevents the risk of unwanted cysteine oxidation (7, 8). Furthermore in higher eukaryotes IMS proteins are released into the cytosol upon apoptotic induction, which triggers the activation of a cell-killing protease activation cascade (9, 10). The IMS can also exchange proteins, lipids, metal ions, and various metabolites with other cellular compartments, allowing mitochondrial metabolism to adapt to cellular homeostasis. In particular, the biogenesis and activity of the respiratory chain were shown to be controlled by various proteins of the IMS (1113). Most of the currently known IMS proteins are soluble proteins; however, some inner membrane proteins have been annotated as IMS proteins as well, such as proteins that are peripherally attached to the inner membrane or membrane proteins that expose enzyme activity toward the IMS (8).All IMS proteins are encoded in the nuclear DNA and have to be imported after translation in the cytosol (1419). Two main pathways are known to mediate the import and sorting of proteins into the IMS. One class of proteins contains bipartite presequences that consist of a matrix targeting signal and a hydrophobic sorting signal. These signals arrest the incoming preprotein at the inner membrane translocase TIM23. After insertion into the inner membrane, the soluble, mature protein can be released into the IMS by the inner membrane protease (IMP) (2022). The second class of IMS proteins possesses characteristic cysteine motifs that typically are either twin CX9C or twin CX3C motifs (23, 24). Upon translocation across the outer membrane via the TOM complex, disulfide bonds are formed within the preproteins, which traps them in the IMS. Disulfide bond formation is mediated by the MIA machinery, which consists of the inner-membrane-anchored Mia40 and the soluble IMS protein Erv1 (2528).The release of cytochrome c from the IMS upon binding and insertion of Bax at the outer membrane is a hallmark of programmed cell death. Although Bax is found only in higher eukaryotes, it was shown that recombinant mammalian Bax induces the release of cytochrome c upon incubation with isolated yeast mitochondria (29, 30). Furthermore, we found that not only cytochrome c but also other soluble IMS proteins are released from Bax-treated yeast mitochondria, whereas soluble matrix proteins largely remain within the organelle (30).We used this apparently conserved mechanism to systematically profile the protein composition of the yeast mitochondrial IMS by employing an experimental approach based on stable isotope labeling, which allowed for the specific identification of Bax-dependent protein release. Almost the entire set of known soluble IMS proteins was identified, and 20 additional, novel soluble IMS proteins were found. We confirmed IMS localization for 15 proteins through biochemical assays. Among these proteins, we identified novel proteins that fall into several classes: (i) those that are involved in maintaining protein redox homeostasis (thioredoxins, thioredoxin reductases, or thiol peroxidases), (ii) those that undergo proteolytic processing by IMP (Ptc5), (iii) those that utilize the MIA pathway for their import (Mic23 and Coa6), and (iv) those that play a role in the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase (Coa6).
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