2 research outputs found
Master Sculptor at Work: Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli Infection Uniquely Modifies Mitochondrial Proteolysis during Its Control of Human Cell Death
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) causes severe diarrheal disease
and is present globally. EPEC virulence requires a bacterial type III secretion system
to inject 20 effector proteins into human intestinal cells. Three effectors travel to
mitochondria and modulate apoptosis; however, the mechanisms by which effectors
control apoptosis from within mitochondria are unknown. To identify and quantify
global changes in mitochondrial proteolysis during infection, we applied the mitochondrial terminal proteomics technique mitochondrial stable isotope labeling by
amino acids in cell culture-terminal amine isotopic labeling of substrates (MS-TAILS).
MS-TAILS identified 1,695 amino N-terminal peptides from 1,060 unique proteins
and 390 N-terminal peptides from 215 mitochondrial proteins at a false discovery
rate of 0.01. Infection modified 230 cellular and 40 mitochondrial proteins, generating 27 cleaved mitochondrial neo-N termini, demonstrating altered proteolytic processing within mitochondria. To distinguish proteolytic events specific to EPEC from
those of canonical apoptosis, we compared mitochondrial changes during infection
with those reported from chemically induced apoptosis. During infection, fewer than
half of all mitochondrial cleavages were previously described for canonical apoptosis, and we identified nine mitochondrial proteolytic sites not previously reported,
including several in proteins with an annotated role in apoptosis, although none occurred at canonical Asp-Glu-Val-Asp (DEVD) sites associated with caspase cleavage.
The identification and quantification of novel neo-N termini evidences the involvement of noncaspase human or EPEC protease(s) resulting from mitochondrialtargeting effectors that modulate cell death upon infection. All proteomics data are
available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD016994.
IMPORTANCE To our knowledge, this is the first study of the mitochondrial proteome or N-terminome during bacterial infection. Identified cleavage sites that had
not been previously reported in the mitochondrial N-terminome and that were not
generated in canonical apoptosis revealed a pathogen-specific strategy to control
human cell apoptosis. These data inform new mechanisms of virulence factors targeting mitochondria and apoptosis during infection and highlight how enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) manipulates human cell death pathways during infection, including candidate substrates of an EPEC protease within mitochondria. This
understanding informs the development of new antivirulence strategies against the
many human pathogens that targe
Global Profiling of Proteolysis from the Mitochondrial Amino Terminome during Early Intrinsic Apoptosis Prior to Caspase-3 Activation
The
human genome encodes ∼20 mitochondrial proteases, yet we know little of
how they sculpt the mitochondrial proteome, particularly during important
mitochondrial events such as the initiation of apoptosis. To characterize
global mitochondrial proteolysis we refined our technique, terminal
amine isotopic labeling of substrates, for mitochondrial SILAC (MS-TAILS)
to identify proteolysis across mitochondria and parent cells in parallel.
Our MS-TAILS analyses identified 45% of the mitochondrial proteome
and identified protein amino (N)-termini from 26% of mitochondrial
proteins, the highest reported coverage of the human mitochondrial
N-terminome. MS-TAILS revealed 97 previously unknown proteolytic sites.
MS-TAILS also identified mitochondrial targeting sequence (MTS) removal
by proteolysis during protein import, confirming 101 MTS sites and
identifying 135 new MTS sites, revealing a wobbly requirement for
the MTS cleavage motif. To examine the relatively unknown initial
cleavage events occurring before the well-studied activation of caspase-3
in intrinsic apoptosis, we quantitatively compared N-terminomes of
mitochondria and their parent cells before and after initiation of
apoptosis at very early time points. By identifying altered levels
of >400 N-termini, MS-TAILS analyses implicated specific mitochondrial
pathways including protein import, fission, and iron homeostasis in
apoptosis initiation. Notably, both staurosporine and Bax activator
molecule-7 triggered in common 7 mitochondrial and 85 cellular cleavage
events that are potentially part of an essential core of apoptosis-initiating
events. All mass spectrometry proteomics data have been deposited
to the ProteomeXchange Consortium with the dataset identifier PXD009054