Mitochondrial phosphoproteomes are functionally specialized across tissues

Author:

Hansen Fynn M1,Kremer Laura S2,Karayel Ozge1,Bludau Isabell1,Larsson Nils-Göran2ORCID,Kühl Inge3ORCID,Mann Matthias1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Proteomics and Signal Transduction, Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry

2. Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet

3. Department of Cell Biology, Institute of Integrative Biology of the Cell, UMR9198, CEA, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, France

Abstract

Mitochondria are essential organelles whose dysfunction causes human pathologies that often manifest in a tissue-specific manner. Accordingly, mitochondrial fitness depends on versatile proteomes specialized to meet diverse tissue-specific requirements. Increasing evidence suggests that phosphorylation may play an important role in regulating tissue-specific mitochondrial functions and pathophysiology. Building on recent advances in mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics, we here quantitatively profile mitochondrial tissue proteomes along with their matching phosphoproteomes. We isolated mitochondria from mouse heart, skeletal muscle, brown adipose tissue, kidney, liver, brain, and spleen by differential centrifugation followed by separation on Percoll gradients and performed high-resolution MS analysis of the proteomes and phosphoproteomes. This in-depth map substantially quantifies known and predicted mitochondrial proteins and provides a resource of core and tissue-specific mitochondrial proteins (mitophos.de). Predicting kinase substrate associations for different mitochondrial compartments indicates tissue-specific regulation at the phosphoproteome level. Illustrating the functional value of our resource, we reproduce mitochondrial phosphorylation events on dynamin-related protein 1 responsible for its mitochondrial recruitment and fission initiation and describe phosphorylation clusters on MIGA2 linked to mitochondrial fusion.

Funder

Swedish Research Council

Swedish Cancer Foundation

European Research Council

Swedish Government and the County Councils

EMBO Long-Term Fellowship

French Muscular Dystrophy Association

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Publisher

Life Science Alliance, LLC

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Plant Science,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Ecology

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