2 research outputs found

    Quantitative Profiling for Substrates of the Mitochondrial Presequence Processing Protease Reveals a Set of Nonsubstrate Proteins Increased upon Proteotoxic Stress

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    The majority of mitochondrial preproteins are targeted via N-terminal presequences that are cleaved upon import into the organelle. The essential mitochondrial processing protease (MPP) is assumed to cleave the majority of incoming precursors; however, only a small fraction of mitochondrial precursors have been experimentally analyzed limiting the information on MPP recognition and substrate specificity. Here we present the first systematic approach for identification of authentic MPP substrate proteins using a temperature-sensitive mutant of the MPP subunit Mas1. Inactivation of MPP at nonpermissive temperature leads to accumulation of immature precursors in mitochondria, which were measured by quantitative N-terminal ChaFRADIC. This led to the identification of 66 novel MPP substrates. Deduction of the cleaved presequences determines arginine in position āˆ’2 of the cleavage site as a main factor for MPP recognition. Interestingly, a set of nonprocessed proteins was also increased in <i>mas1</i> mutant mitochondria. Additionally, <i>mas1</i> mitochondria respond to temperature elevation with an increase in membrane potential and oxygen consumption. These changes might indicate that <i>mas1</i> cells exert a response to balance the proteotoxic stress induced by MPP dysfunction

    Novel Highly Sensitive, Specific, and Straightforward Strategy for Comprehensive Nā€‘Terminal Proteomics Reveals Unknown Substrates of the Mitochondrial Peptidase Icp55

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    We present a novel straightforward method for enrichment of N-terminal peptides, utilizing charge-based fractional diagonal chromatography (ChaFRADIC). Our method is robust, easy to operate, fast, specific, and more sensitive than existing methods, enabling the differential quantitation of 1459 nonredundant N-terminal peptides between two <i>S. cerevisiae</i> samples within 10 h of LCā€“MS, starting from only 50 Ī¼g of protein per condition and analyzing only 40% of the obtained fractions. Using ChaFRADIC we compared mitochondrial proteins from wild-type and icp55Ī” yeast (30 Ī¼g each). Icp55 is an intermediate cleaving peptidase, which, following mitochondrial processing peptidase (MPP)-dependent cleavage of signal sequences, removes a single amino acid from a specific set of proteins according to the N-end rule. Using ChaFRADIC we identified 36 icp55 substrates, 14 of which were previously unknown, expanding the set of known icp55 substrates to a total of 52 proteins. Interestingly, a novel substrate, Isa2, is likely processed by Icp55 in two consecutive steps and thus might represent the first example of a triple processing event in a mitochondrial precursor protein. Thus, ChaFRADIC is a powerful and practicable tool for protease and peptidase research, providing the sensitivity to characterize even samples that can be obtained only in small quantities
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