Comparative Analysis of Mitochondrial N-Termini from Mouse, Human, and Yeast

The majority of mitochondrial proteins are encoded in the nuclear genome, translated in the cytoplasm, and directed to the mitochondria by an N-terminal presequence that is cleaved upon import. Recently, N-proteome catalogs have been generated for mitochondria from yeast and from human U937 cells. H...

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Published inMolecular & cellular proteomics Vol. 16; no. 4; pp. 512 - 523
Main Authors Calvo, Sarah E., Julien, Olivier, Clauser, Karl R., Shen, Hongying, Kamer, Kimberli J., Wells, James A., Mootha, Vamsi K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.04.2017
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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ISSN1535-9476
1535-9484
1535-9484
DOI10.1074/mcp.M116.063818

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Summary:The majority of mitochondrial proteins are encoded in the nuclear genome, translated in the cytoplasm, and directed to the mitochondria by an N-terminal presequence that is cleaved upon import. Recently, N-proteome catalogs have been generated for mitochondria from yeast and from human U937 cells. Here, we applied the subtiligase method to determine N-termini for 327 proteins in mitochondria isolated from mouse liver and kidney. Comparative analysis between mitochondrial N-termini from mouse, human, and yeast proteins shows that whereas presequences are poorly conserved at the sequence level, other presequence properties are extremely conserved, including a length of ∼20–60 amino acids, a net charge between +3 to +6, and the presence of stabilizing amino acids at the N-terminus of mature proteins that follow the N-end rule from bacteria. As in yeast, ∼80% of mouse presequence cleavage sites match canonical motifs for three mitochondrial peptidases (MPP, Icp55, and Oct1), whereas the remainder do not match any known peptidase motifs. We show that mature mitochondrial proteins often exist with a spectrum of N-termini, consistent with a model of multiple cleavage events by MPP and Icp55. In addition to analysis of canonical targeting presequences, our N-terminal dataset allows the exploration of other cleavage events and provides support for polypeptide cleavage into two distinct enzymes (Hsd17b4), protein cleavages key for signaling (Oma1, Opa1, Htra2, Mavs, and Bcs2l13), and in several cases suggests novel protein isoforms (Scp2, Acadm, Adck3, Hsdl2, Dlst, and Ogdh). We present an integrated catalog of mammalian mitochondrial N-termini that can be used as a community resource to investigate individual proteins, to elucidate mechanisms of mammalian mitochondrial processing, and to allow researchers to engineer tags distally to the presequence cleavage.
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Recipient of a Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Government of Canada and a fellowship from the UCSF Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research, which is funded in part by the Sandler Foundation.
Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
ISSN:1535-9476
1535-9484
1535-9484
DOI:10.1074/mcp.M116.063818