Systematic Approaches to Study Eclipsed Targeting of Proteins Uncover a New Family of Mitochondrial Proteins

Cells. 2023 Jun 5;12(11):1550. doi: 10.3390/cells12111550.

Abstract

Dual localization or dual targeting refers to the phenomenon by which identical, or almost identical, proteins are localized to two (or more) separate compartments of the cell. From previous work in the field, we had estimated that a third of the mitochondrial proteome is dual-targeted to extra-mitochondrial locations and suggested that this abundant dual targeting presents an evolutionary advantage. Here, we set out to study how many additional proteins whose main activity is outside mitochondria are also localized, albeit at low levels, to mitochondria (eclipsed). To do this, we employed two complementary approaches utilizing the α-complementation assay in yeast to uncover the extent of such an eclipsed distribution: one systematic and unbiased and the other based on mitochondrial targeting signal (MTS) predictions. Using these approaches, we suggest 280 new eclipsed distributed protein candidates. Interestingly, these proteins are enriched for distinctive properties compared to their exclusively mitochondrial-targeted counterparts. We focus on one unexpected eclipsed protein family of the Triose-phosphate DeHydrogenases (TDH) and prove that, indeed, their eclipsed distribution in mitochondria is important for mitochondrial activity. Our work provides a paradigm of deliberate eclipsed mitochondrial localization, targeting and function, and should expand our understanding of mitochondrial function in health and disease.

Keywords: TDH2; TDH3; dual protein targeting; eclipsed protein targeting; mitochondria; yeast model system.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Amino Acid Sequence
  • Mitochondria / metabolism
  • Mitochondrial Proteins* / metabolism
  • Proteome / metabolism
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae* / metabolism

Substances

  • Mitochondrial Proteins
  • Proteome

Grants and funding

The study was supported by the German Israeli Project Cooperation (Grant P17516) DIP to MS and OP. This work was supported by grants to OP from the Israel Science Foundation (Grant 1455/17) and The CREATE Project of the National Research Foundation of Singapore (Singapore-Hebrew University of Jerusalem MMID2). Work in the Schuldiner lab was additionally supported by the ERC CoG OnTarget (864068). The funders had no role in study design, data collection, and interpretation or in the decision to submit the work for publication. MS is an Incumbent of the Dr. Gilbert Omenn and Martha Darling Professorial Chair in Molecular Genetics, and OP is an Incumbent of the Harry and Helen L. Brenner Chair in Molecular Biology.