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Mitochondrial protein functions elucidated by multi-omic mass spectrometry profiling

Authors :
David J. Pagliarini
Mike T. Veling
Kyle J. Connors
Zachary A. Kemmerer
Arne Ulbrich
Alicia L. Richards
Jacob Sokol
Joshua J. Coon
Elyse C. Freiberger
Paul D. Hutchins
Xiao Guo
Michael S. Westphall
Harald Marx
Nicholas W. Kwiecien
Alexander S. Hebert
Jonathan A. Stefely
Kyle P. Robinson
Edna A. Trujillo
Matthew J. P. Rush
Adam Jochem
Source :
Nature biotechnology
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Proteomics, lipidomics and metabolomics of single gene deletion yeast strains sheds light on mitochondrial protein biology. Mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with many human diseases, including cancer and neurodegeneration, that are often linked to proteins and pathways that are not well-characterized. To begin defining the functions of such poorly characterized proteins, we used mass spectrometry to map the proteomes, lipidomes, and metabolomes of 174 yeast strains, each lacking a single gene related to mitochondrial biology. 144 of these genes have human homologs, 60 of which are associated with disease and 39 of which are uncharacterized. We present a multi-omic data analysis and visualization tool that we use to find covariance networks that can predict molecular functions, correlations between profiles of related gene deletions, gene-specific perturbations that reflect protein functions, and a global respiration deficiency response. Using this multi-omic approach, we link seven proteins including Hfd1p and its human homolog ALDH3A1 to mitochondrial coenzyme Q (CoQ) biosynthesis, an essential pathway disrupted in many human diseases. This Resource should provide molecular insights into mitochondrial protein functions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15461696 and 10870156
Volume :
34
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature biotechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....420fd20ef584196d049500cf37f9039e