The mitochondrial dimeric phospholipid cardiolipin is characterized by a high degree of unsaturation of its acyl chains, which is important for its functional interaction with mitochondrial enzymes. The unusual fatty acid composition of cardiolipin molecular species emerges from a de novo synthesized "premature" species by extensive acyl chain remodeling that involves as yet only partially identified acyltransferases and phospholipases. Recently, the yeast protein Taz1p was shown to function as a transacylase, which catalyzes the reacylation of monolysocardiolipin to mature cardiolipin. A defect in the orthologous human TAZ gene is associated with Barth syndrome, a severe genetic disorder, which may lead to cardiac failure and death in childhood. We now identified the protein encoded by reading frame YGR110W as a mitochondrial phospholipase, which deacylates de novo synthesized cardiolipin. Ygr110wp has a strong substrate preference for palmitic acid residues and functions upstream of Taz1p, to generate monolysocardiolipin for Taz1p-dependent reacylation with unsaturated fatty acids. We therefore rename the Ygr110wp as Cld1p (cardiolipin-specific deacylase 1).
The mitochondrial dimeric phospholipidcardiolipin is characterized by a high degree of unsaturation of its acyl chains, which is important for its functional interaction with mitochondrial enzymes. The unusual fatty acid composition of cardiolipin molecular species emerges from a de novo synthesized "premature" species by extensive acyl chain remodeling that involves as yet only partially identified acyltransferases and phospholipases. Recently, the yeast protein Taz1p was shown to function as a transacylase, which catalyzes the reacylation of monolysocardiolipin to mature cardiolipin. A defect in the orthologous humanTAZ gene is associated with Barth syndrome, a severe genetic disorder, which may lead to cardiac failure and death in childhood. We now identified the protein encoded by reading frame YGR110W as a mitochondrial phospholipase, which deacylates de novo synthesized cardiolipin. Ygr110wp has a strong substrate preference for palmitic acid residues and functions upstream of Taz1p, to generate monolysocardiolipin for Taz1p-dependent reacylation with unsaturated fatty acids. We therefore rename the Ygr110wp as Cld1p (cardiolipin-specific deacylase 1).
Cardiolipin (CL)2
is a dimeric phospholipid specifically enriched in mitochondrial membranes
(1). It plays an important role
in mitochondrial structure and function and stabilizes respiratory chain super
complexes and individual electron transport complexes
(2-4).
The CL biosynthetic pathway is well characterized in the yeastSaccharomyces cerevisiae, and the enzymes catalyzing the three
sequential reactions involved are all associated with mitochondrial membranes
(4,
5). CL synthesis shares the
same precursor, CDP-diacylglycerol, with the main cellular phospholipids, yet
it differs significantly from other phospholipids in its acyl-chain
composition that is characterized by a high degree of unsaturated fatty acids.
Although cardiolipin was believed to be essential to support mitochondrial
function, mutants defective in cardiolipin synthase (Crd1p) are viable and
display only moderate defects of mitochondrial function
(6,
7). More severe is a defect in
the first committed step of CL synthesis, catalyzed by
phosphatidylglycerolphosphate synthase Pgs1p/Pel1p
(8). pgs1 mutants are
temperature-sensitive, unable to grow on non-fermentable carbon sources for
growth, and petite lethal, i.e. dependent on intact mitochondrial DNA
for survival (8). More subtle
mitochondrial phenotypes emerge from alterations of cardiolipin acyl-chain
remodeling. “Premature” cardiolipin synthesized by Crd1p undergoes
significant remodeling of its acyl-chain composition
(9). Mature CL in yeast
contains mainly palmitoleic acid (C16:1) and oleic acid (C18:1), which
distinguishes CL from most other phospholipids by its high degree of
unsaturation (4,
5,
10). In humans, a severe
genetic disorder, the Barth syndrome, is associated with defective CL
acyl-chain remodeling (11,
12). This disease is caused by
mutations in the TAZ gene encoding Tafazzin, for which a functional
ortholog also exists in yeast
(13). Tafazzin and its yeast
counterpart Taz1p are shown to function as transacylases with substrate
specificity for either lyso-PC or monolyso-CL (MLCL)
(14,
15). The yeast mutant
taz1 shows dramatic alterations in the cardiolipinfatty acid
pattern, an accumulation of MLCL, and a decreased overall CL content
(15). A model for CL
acyl-chain remodeling postulated by Xu et al.
(14,
16) suggests an active
deacylation-reacylation cycle between CL and MLCL. The transacylase Taz1p
catalyzes the reacylation of MLCL to CL, but it does not possess any
phospholipase activity (14).
Thus, the activity generating MLCL, presumably a mitochondrial CL-specific
phospholipase A (PLA), remained to be identified.In this work we show that the yeast open reading frame YGR110W
encodes a mitochondrial protein, which functions as PLA in vitro and
is involved in generating MLCL in vivo. Ygr110wp deacylates de
novo synthesized CL with a clear substrate preference for palmitic acid
residues. We hence term the gene CLD1, encoding a
cardiolipin-specific deacylase.
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Media and Growth Conditions—Yeast strains were grown in YPD
medium at 30 °C on a rotary shaker with vigorous aeration. Standard YPD
medium contained 1% yeast extract (Difco), 2% glucose (Merck), and 2%
Bacto-peptone (Difco). For plate drop tests cells were grown in YPD for 16 h,
and cell numbers were estimated using a Casy cell counter (Schärfe
Systems). Serial dilutions of cell cultures were prepared in microtiter plates
(5 × 105 to 5 × 102 cells per well). Cells
were spotted on YPD, YNBLac (0.67% YeastNitrogen Base (Difco), vitamins,
trace elements (17), and 3%
lactic acid, Merck, adjusted to pH 5.5) or YNB synthetic medium containing 3%
glycerol (Roth) and 1% ethanol (Merck). Yeast transformants carrying plasmids
were grown on uracil-free YNB synthetic medium containing 2% glucose (Merck),
0.67% YeastNitrogen Base (Difco), vitamins, and trace elements
(17).Strains and Plasmids—Strains used in this study are listed
in Table 1. The double mutant
ygr110wΔtaz1Δ was constructed by standard
genetic crosses and tetrad dissection and verified by colony PCR, using gene
deletion-specific primers
(18).
Strains and genotypes used in this studyFor generation of the plasmid pYGR110W-GFP, the YGR110W gene was
amplified from BY4742 chromosomal DNA using
5′-CGGAATTCATGTTCAAGTCAACTTTAAACTCC-3′ as forward and
5′-CAAGACGTCGACTATTTTTTGCATTTCTTTCGTAAGA-3′ as reverse
primers. The EcoRI and SalI restriction sites are underlined. The restricted
PCR fragment was inserted into the EcoRI/SalI sites of the pUG35 vector
(provided by W. H. Hegemann, Institute of Microbiology, Düsseldorf,
Germany). For the generation of plasmid pGST-YGR110W, YGR110W reading
frame excised with EcoRI and SalI from plasmid pYGR110W-GFP was ligated into
pYEX4T-1 (Clontech). All vectors were transformed into yeast strains using the
lithium acetate protocol (19).
Positive transformants were selected on uracil-free YNB synthetic medium.Isolation of Mitochondria—Cells were grown overnight in YPD
before inoculation of the main culture to an optical density of
A600 nm = 0.1. Wild-type BY4742 and
ygr110wΔ, taz1Δ, and
ygr110wΔtaz1Δ mutant cells were incubated at 30
°C on a shaking platform for 16 h before harvesting. For overexpressing
GST fusion proteins, wild-type BY4742, ygr110wΔ, and
ygr110wΔtaz1Δ mutant cells harboring either
pYEX4T-1 or pGST-YGR110W were inoculated into synthetic media without uracil
to an optical density of A600 nm = 0.1. Cells were grown
for 16 h at 30 °C before induction of expression with 0.5 mm
CuSO4 for 4 h. Mitochondria were prepared from spheroplasts as
described (20). Isolated
mitochondria were resuspended in 10 mm Tris/HCl, pH 7.4, and stored
at -80 °C until further analysis.Proteins were precipitated with trichloroacetic acid and quantified
according to Lowry et al.
(21). Proteins from cell
homogenate (6 μg) and mitochondria (5 μg) were separated on 10%
SDS-polyacrylamide gels prior to Western blot analysis
(22,
23). The GST fusion protein
was detected using rabbit anti-GST antibody (Calbiochem), and porin was
detected using a rabbit anti-porin antibody (generously provided by G. Daum,
Technical University Graz). Luminescence was detected using Curix Ultra UV-G
x-ray films (Agfa). The density of the immunoreactive bands was determined
with Image Quant software (Amersham Biosciences). For calculating the relative
enrichment of porin in mitochondria, the signal obtained for homogenate
fractions was set to one.Lipid Analysis—Total lipids were extracted from whole cell
extracts and from mitochondria (equivalent to 2.5-5 mg of protein) isolated
from BY4742, ygr110wΔ as well as from strains harboring either
pYEX4T-1 or pGST-YGR110W with chloroform/methanol 2:1 (v/v) according to Folch
et al. (24). The
organic phase was dried under a stream of nitrogen, and dissolved in 400 μl
of chloroform/methanol (2:1, v/v). Phospholipids were separated by
two-dimensional TLC using silica gel 60 plates (Merck) as described before
(25). Phospholipids were
visualized by staining with iodine vapor and spots were scraped off for fatty
acid determination. Fatty acids were converted to fatty acid methyl esters
using a boron-trifluoride complex solution (14% solution in methanol, Sigma)
as described (26). Fatty acid
methyl esters were dissolved in petrol ether and analyzed by GC/MS on a
Trace-GC Ultra-DSQ-MS system (Thermo-Electron). The GC conditions were as
follows: splitless injection, injector temperature 250 °C, HP-5 MS column
(30 m × 0.25 mm ID, 0.25-μm film, Agilent, Waldbronn, Germany);
carrier gas helium 5.0, flow 1 ml/min, temperature gradient programmed from 60
to 300 °C at 20 °C/min after an initial time of 4 min. The MS
conditions were as follows: positive electron impact ionization, ionization
energy of 70 eV, ionization source temperature of 280 °C, emission current
of 100 μA, full-scan mode, scan range m/z 50-800, and
scan time of 0.29 s. Data acquisition and analysis were done with Xcalibur
2.0™ software. For quantitative analysis, the corresponding peaks of the
fatty acid methyl esters in the extracted ion chromatogram of
m/z 74 (McLafferty fragment of fatty acid methyl ester) were
integrated, and the relative fatty acid distribution was determined.One-dimensional separation of mitochondrial lipids was used for the
analysis of MLCL levels. Lipid standards were purchased from Avanti Polar
Lipids. Lipid extracts were applied onto silica gel plates treated with 1.8%
boric acid using an automated sampler (Camag Automatic TLC Sampler 4), and
lipids were separated using chloroform/ethanol/water/triethylamine
(30/35/7/35, v/v) as the solvent as described by Vaden et al.
(27). Lipids were visualized
by carbonization at 120 °C for 10 min after dipping plates into 3.2%
H2SO4 and 0.5% MnCl2 and subsequent staining
with iodine vapor. Stained silica plates were scanned using an Epson
Perfection 3200 Photo Scanner (Epson), and relative amounts of phospholipids
were quantified using ImageJ software (National Institutes of Health).Microscopy—BY4742 cells harboring the plasmid pYGR110W-GFP
were cultivated overnight in YNB media without uracil. The cells were
subsequently shifted to media lacking methionine for 3 h to induce expression
of the GFP fusion protein. Microscopy was performed on a Leica SP2 confocal
microscope using a 100× oil immersion objective (numerical aperture
1.4). For labeling of yeast mitochondria 1 μl of MitoTracker® Red
CM-H2XRos (Invitrogen) was added to 1 ml of cell suspension in a
1.5-ml reaction tube (final concentration: 1 μg/ml). Labeling was performed
for 10 min at room temperature without subsequent washing of cells. GFP was
excited at 488 nm, and fluorescence emission was detected between 500 and 535
nm. MitoTracker® Red CM-H2XRos was excited at 543 nm, and
fluorescence emission was detected between 550 and 650 nm. Fluorescence images
were acquired simultaneously. Transmission images were recorded using
differential interference contrast optics.Sequence features of Ygr110wp. A, positions of conserved
lipase and acyltransferase motifs are indicated by black boxes in the
schematic illustration of Ygr110wp. The AXSXG lipase as well
as the HXXXXD acyltransferase motifs are underlined. The
striped box represents the α/β hydrolase fold domain.
B, Kyte-Doolittle plot of the Ygr110wp primary amino acid sequence.
No transmembrane regions were predicted by in silico analysis.PLA Activity Assays—Mitochondria isolated from
ygr110wΔ mutant cells harboring either the plasmid pYEX4T-1 or
pGST-YGR110W and wild-type cells were used as enzyme source to analyze
PLA2 activity by the cPLA2 Assay Kit from Cayman
Biochemicals. Hydrolysis of the substrate arachidonoyl thiophosphatidylcholine
was determined according to the manufacturer's protocol.Cardiolipin from Escherichia coli (Avanti Polar Lipids) was used
to assay mitochondrial fractions for CL-specific phospholipase activity. 400
μg of cardiolipin was suspended in 150 μl of reaction buffer (160
mm HEPES, pH 7.4, 300 mm NaCl, 20 mm
CaCl2, 8 mm CHAPS, 60% glycerol) and mixed with
mitochondria (350 μg of protein). Assays were performed at 30 °C for up
to 4 h under vigorous shaking. Lipids were extracted and analyzed as described
above.
RESULTS
Sequence Features of Ygr110wp—Reading frame YGR110W
encodes a 445-amino acid protein with a calculated molecular mass of 52 kDa.
The protein shows distant homology to the mammalian protein CGI-58, which is
an activator of the major mammalian triglyceride lipase ATGL
(28) and was recently shown to
act as a lysophosphatidic acyltransferase
(29). The amino acid sequence
of Ygr110wp contains an α/β hydrolase fold and features a conserved
serine residue embedded in a
228AXSXG232 motif. This motif is a
variation of GXSXG, which is commonly found in esterases,
acyltransferases, and lipases. Sequence alignments of Ygr110wp unveiled
similarities to bacterial lysophospholipase domains (COG 2267) and a
hydrolase/acyltransferase domain (COG 0596). The structural motif
424HXXXXD429 is indicative of glycerolipid
acyltransferase activity (30)
and is also present in the homologous protein, Ict1p, which was recently
described as an acyl-CoA-dependent lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase
(31)
(Fig. 1). Taken
together, these data suggested a possible function for Ygr110wp as a lipase or
acyltransferase. The hydrophobicity plot indicates a lack of transmembrane
domains (Fig. 1), and
no specific subcellular targeting signals were predicted by in silico
analyses.
FIGURE 1.
Sequence features of Ygr110wp. A, positions of conserved
lipase and acyltransferase motifs are indicated by black boxes in the
schematic illustration of Ygr110wp. The AXSXG lipase as well
as the HXXXXD acyltransferase motifs are underlined. The
striped box represents the α/β hydrolase fold domain.
B, Kyte-Doolittle plot of the Ygr110wp primary amino acid sequence.
No transmembrane regions were predicted by in silico analysis.
Ygr110wp Localizes Exclusively to Mitochondria but Is Not Essential for
Mitochondrial Function—To obtain further insight into the function
of Ygr110wp we investigated the subcellular localization by fluorescence
microscopy of a C-terminal GFP fusion protein expressed from plasmid
pYGR110W-GFP in wild-type cells. Ygr110wp-GFP was detected exclusively in
mitochondria, as determined by co-staining with the mitochondria-specific
vital dye, MitoTracker® Red (Fig.
2). This specific mitochondrial localization of Ygr110wp
was also confirmed by cell fractionation (see below).
FIGURE 2.
Subcellular localization of Ygr110wp and phenotypic analysis of mutant
strains. A, subcellular localization of Ygr110wp. The expression
of the C-terminal GFP fusion protein of Ygr110wp in BY4742 was induced by
shifting the cells to synthetic medium lacking methionine for 3 h. Cells were
incubated with MitoTracker® Red CM-H2XRos for 10 min, and
images of red (MitoTracker) and green (GFP) fluorescence
were collected by confocal microscopy. Mitochondrial localization of GFP
fusion proteins was confirmed by merging of red and green
fluorescence images. B, growth on fermentable and non-fermentable
carbon sources. Serial dilutions of cells were prepared in microtiter plates
(5 × 105 to 5 × 102 cells per well) and
spotted on YPD, YNBLac, and YNB containing glycerol/ethanol as carbon sources,
using a prong plunger. Experiments were performed three times. The double
mutant ygr110wΔtaz1Δ displays a severe growth
defect on non-fermentable carbon sources.
The mitochondrial localization of the protein prompted us to investigate
the impact of a mutation on mitochondrial function. As shown in
Fig. 2, deletion of
YGR110W did not affect growth on glucose or on non-fermentable carbon
sources at various temperatures, unlike the taz1Δ mutant, which
showed reduced growth at 37 °C on glycerol/ethanol-containing media
(15). We conclude that
YGR110W does not play an essential role in the cell, nor is it
indispensable for mitochondrial function.ygr110wΔ Mutants Do Not Show Gross Alterations of
Cellular Phospholipids but Specific Defects in Mitochondrial
Cardiolipin—Based on the putative function as a lipase or
acyltransferase, as predicted by in silico analyses, we determined
total cellular fatty acid and lipid composition of wild-type and
ygr110wΔ mutant cells. Cells were grown to late exponential
phase on glucose media, and lipids were extracted and analyzed as described
under “Experimental Procedures.” No significant differences were
observed in cellular lipid composition and fatty acid distribution between
wild-type and mutant cells (data not shown). Because Ygr110wp is a
mitochondrial protein, we then specifically focused our attention on
mitochondrial lipids and determined the fatty acid composition of
mitochondrial phospholipids individually. Mitochondria were isolated from the
ygr110wΔ mutant and from wild-type cells, and phospholipids
were extracted and separated by two-dimensional TLC. Lipid spots were scraped
off for determining the acyl-chain composition by GC/MS. As shown in
Fig. 3, the deletion of
YGR110W had a dramatic and specific effect on the composition of
fatty acids in cardiolipin. We found that the content of C16:0-acyl
chains in CL was increased 2.4-fold in the mutant, compared with wild type,
whereas the levels of C16:1- and C18:1-acyl chains were
reduced by factors of 2.6 and 2.8, respectively
(Fig. 3). Analysis of the fatty
acid patterns of other mitochondrial phospholipids, phosphatidylcholine,
phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine, and phosphatidylinositol, did
not unveil significant changes in the ygr110wΔ mutant
(Table 2). Thus, deletion of
gene YGR110W specifically affected acyl-chain composition of CL,
suggesting that Ygr110wp is part of the cardiolipin remodeling process in
yeast.
FIGURE 3.
Cardiolipin acyl chain composition of wild-type and
Δ mutant strains. Mitochondria from wild-type
BY4742 and ygr110wΔ mutant cells were isolated after 16 h of
growth in YPD. Total lipids were extracted from mitochondria and separated by
two-dimensional TLC as described under “Experimental Procedures.”
Fatty acid (FA) profiles of CL were analyzed by GC-MS from
ygr110wΔ (white bars) and wild-type (black
bars). Data are expressed as relative percentage of total acyl chains in
CL and represent means ± S.D. of at least three independent
experiments. The ygr110wΔ mutant shows a 2.4-fold increased
level of C16:0 acyl chains in CL compared with wild type.
TABLE 2
Fatty acid composition of phospholipids from mitochondria isolated from
ygr110wΔ mutant and wild-type cells
Phospholipids were extracted, and fatty acid methyl esters were isolated
and quantified as described under “Experimental Procedures.”
Results represent the means ± S.D. of at least three analyzes performed
with two separate mitochondrial preparations. PC, phosphatidylcholine; PE,
phosphatidylethanolamine; PI, phosphatidylinositol; PS,
phosphatidylserine.
C16:1
C16:0
C18:1
C18:0
BY4742
PC
33.67 ± 5.51
40.33 ± 5.13
15.67 ± 2.31
10.33 ± 2.52
PE
26.00 ± 4.32
48.25 ± 7.68
22.25 ± 4.50
3.25 ± 0.96
PI
8.00 ± 2.00
56.33 ± 8.96
12.00 ± 1.00
23.67 ± 7.64
PS
13.00 ± 1.00
59.00 ± 7.21
18.00 ± 2.00
10.33 ± 5.03
ygr110wΔ
PC
34.67 ± 6.11
38.67 ± 7.37
16.67 ± 2.31
9.67 ± 1.15
PE
24.00 ± 5.10
51.25 ± 3.86
20.50 ± 1.29
4.00 ± 1.83
PI
8.00 ± 1.00
59.67 ± 2.31
12.00 ± 1.73
20.33 ± 2.08
PS
13.00 ± 1.00
58.00 ± 6.08
19.67 ± 0.58
9.33 ± 5.51
Fatty acid composition of phospholipids from mitochondria isolated from
ygr110wΔ mutant and wild-type cellsPhospholipids were extracted, and fatty acid methyl esters were isolated
and quantified as described under “Experimental Procedures.”
Results represent the means ± S.D. of at least three analyzes performed
with two separate mitochondrial preparations. PC, phosphatidylcholine; PE,
phosphatidylethanolamine; PI, phosphatidylinositol; PS,
phosphatidylserine.Subcellular localization of Ygr110wp and phenotypic analysis of mutant
strains. A, subcellular localization of Ygr110wp. The expression
of the C-terminal GFP fusion protein of Ygr110wp in BY4742 was induced by
shifting the cells to synthetic medium lacking methionine for 3 h. Cells were
incubated with MitoTracker® Red CM-H2XRos for 10 min, and
images of red (MitoTracker) and green (GFP) fluorescence
were collected by confocal microscopy. Mitochondrial localization of GFP
fusion proteins was confirmed by merging of red and green
fluorescence images. B, growth on fermentable and non-fermentable
carbon sources. Serial dilutions of cells were prepared in microtiter plates
(5 × 105 to 5 × 102 cells per well) and
spotted on YPD, YNBLac, and YNB containing glycerol/ethanol as carbon sources,
using a prong plunger. Experiments were performed three times. The double
mutant ygr110wΔtaz1Δ displays a severe growth
defect on non-fermentable carbon sources.Cardiolipin acyl chain composition of wild-type and
Δ mutant strains. Mitochondria from wild-type
BY4742 and ygr110wΔ mutant cells were isolated after 16 h of
growth in YPD. Total lipids were extracted from mitochondria and separated by
two-dimensional TLC as described under “Experimental Procedures.”
Fatty acid (FA) profiles of CL were analyzed by GC-MS from
ygr110wΔ (white bars) and wild-type (black
bars). Data are expressed as relative percentage of total acyl chains in
CL and represent means ± S.D. of at least three independent
experiments. The ygr110wΔ mutant shows a 2.4-fold increased
level of C16:0 acyl chains in CL compared with wild type.Expression of GST-Ygr110wp in ygr110wΔ Mutants Restores
Wild-type C—To exclude the possibility
that the observed changes in CL composition are the combined results of the
nuclear mutation and induced secondary defects of mitochondrial DNA, we
expressed a plasmid-borne GST-Ygr110wp fusion construct in the
ygr110w mutant and analyzed CL fatty acid profiles. First, we
confirmed by cell fractionation and immunoblot analysis the mitochondrial
localization of the fusion protein (Fig.
4). Mitochondria were isolated from the mutant strain
overexpressing the fusion protein or GST only, as described under
“Experimental Procedures.” The relative enrichment of porin in
mitochondrial fractions was greater than 10-fold, confirming the high quality
of the mitochondrial fractions
(32). Interestingly, the
N-terminal GST tag did not impair mitochondrial localization of the protein,
consistent with the lack of any predictable N-terminal mitochondrial targeting
sequences (see above).
FIGURE 4.
Expression of GST-Ygr110wp in the Δ mutant
and in wild-type cells. A, Western blot analysis. Mitochondria
were isolated as described under “Experimental Procedures,” and
Western blots were probed with antibodies against GST and porin. Lane
1, homogenate (6 μg) obtained from the mutant strain
ygr110wΔ-expressing GST only; lane 2, homogenate (6
μg) obtained from ygr110wΔ overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp;
lane 3, mitochondria (5 μg) prepared from ygr110wΔ
expressing GST only; lane 4, mitochondria (5 μg) prepared from
ygr110wΔ overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp. Numbers and
bars on the left indicate the molecular mass markers.
Experiments were performed as triplicates with at least two independent
preparations of mitochondria. A strong band at 81 kDa was detected with
anti-GST antibodies in mitochondria expressing the fusion protein. B,
fatty acid profile of cardiolipin from mutant cells expressing GST or
GST-Ygr110wp. Fatty acid methyl esters were isolated and quantified as
described under “Experimental Procedures.” White bars, FA
profile of CL isolated from ygr110wΔ expressing GST only;
black bars, FA profile of CL from ygr110wΔ
overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp. Data are expressed as percentage of total acyl
chains in CL and represent means ± S.D. of at least three independent
experiments. The fusion protein GST-Ygr110wp suppressed the accumulation of
C16:0 acyl chains in CL of ygr110wΔ to wild-type
level. C, fatty acid profile of CL from mitochondria isolated from
wild-type cells expressing GST-Ygr110wp (lane 1) or GST (lane
2). White bars, FA profile of CL isolated from wild-type
expressing GST only; black bars, FA profile of CL from wild-type
overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp. Data are expressed as percentage of total acyl
chains in CL and represent means ± S.D. of at least three independent
experiments. Overexpression of GST-Ygr110wp did not change the fatty acid
profile of cardiolipin in wild type.
We next extracted and analyzed mitochondrial lipids from mutant cells
expressing GST only, or transformed with the plasmid expressing the
GST-Ygr110wp fusion. Overexpression of GST-Ygr110wp restored wild-type levels
of C16:0-acyl residues in cardiolipin of the
ygr110wΔ strain, whereas they remained at the high level in the
mutant strain expressing GST only (Fig.
4). Interestingly, overexpression of GST-Ygr110wp also
increased the relative amount of C18:0 in CL, at the expense of
C16:1, in the mutant (Fig.
4), however, no changes in CL fatty acids were observed
in the wild-type upon GST-Ygr110wp overexpression
(Fig. 4). These data
support the notion of a CL remodeling complex that is dependent on
stoichiometric balance of its components.Ygr110wp Expressed in ygr110wΔ Shows PLA Activity in
Vitro—The specific phospholipases A catalyzing the deacylation of
newly synthesized cardiolipin are currently unknown. The altered fatty acid
pattern of cardiolipin in ygr110wΔ mutants and structural
motifs predicted from the sequence prompted us to test whether the protein may
function as a phospholipase A in vitro. Despite the rather
hydrophilic character of the protein we failed to isolate purified GST fusion
protein from yeast or E. coli extracts due to its strong aggregation
behavior (data not shown). Instead, we tested mitochondrial extracts prepared
from the ygr110wΔ mutant strain overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp or
expressing GST only and wild-type, for PLA2 activity, as described
under “Experimental Procedures.” Mitochondria harboring the
GST-Ygr110wp fusion protein showed a PLA2-specific activity of
0.767 nmol/min.mg of protein using phosphatidylcholine as the substrate
(Fig. 5). This
PLA2 activity in mitochondria of YGR110W-expressing cells
was 3.3-fold higher compared with extracts from control mitochondria and
doubled compared with wild-type mitochondria
(Fig. 5).
FIGURE 5.
Phospholipase A activity of GST-Ygr110wp. Mitochondrial fractions
were used for PLA activity assays as described under “Experimental
Procedures.” A, the specific activity of GST-Ygr110wp toward
sn2-arachidonoyl phosphatidylcholine was 0.767 nmol/min.mg of
protein, which corresponds to a 3.3-fold induction over the control and is
2-fold higher compared with wild-type mitochondria. Data represent means
± S.D. of at least three independent experiments. B,
CL-specific phospholipase A activity of GST-Ygr110wp. Lane 1,
mitochondria from ygr110wΔ mutant cells harboring pGST-YGR110W.
Lane 2, mitochondria from ygr110wΔ mutant cells
harboring pYEX4T-1. Lane 3, mitochondria from ygr110wΔ
mutant cells harboring pGST-YGR110W without exogenous CL. Lane 4,
mitochondria from wild-type cells. Lane 5, lipid standards;
CL, cardiolipin; MLCL, monolysocardiolipin; PA,
phosphatidic acid. Experiments were performed three times with two independent
mitochondrial preparations.
Expression of GST-Ygr110wp in the Δ mutant
and in wild-type cells. A, Western blot analysis. Mitochondria
were isolated as described under “Experimental Procedures,” and
Western blots were probed with antibodies against GST and porin. Lane
1, homogenate (6 μg) obtained from the mutant strain
ygr110wΔ-expressing GST only; lane 2, homogenate (6
μg) obtained from ygr110wΔ overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp;
lane 3, mitochondria (5 μg) prepared from ygr110wΔ
expressing GST only; lane 4, mitochondria (5 μg) prepared from
ygr110wΔ overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp. Numbers and
bars on the left indicate the molecular mass markers.
Experiments were performed as triplicates with at least two independent
preparations of mitochondria. A strong band at 81 kDa was detected with
anti-GST antibodies in mitochondria expressing the fusion protein. B,
fatty acid profile of cardiolipin from mutant cells expressing GST or
GST-Ygr110wp. Fatty acid methyl esters were isolated and quantified as
described under “Experimental Procedures.” White bars, FA
profile of CL isolated from ygr110wΔ expressing GST only;
black bars, FA profile of CL from ygr110wΔ
overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp. Data are expressed as percentage of total acyl
chains in CL and represent means ± S.D. of at least three independent
experiments. The fusion protein GST-Ygr110wp suppressed the accumulation of
C16:0 acyl chains in CL of ygr110wΔ to wild-type
level. C, fatty acid profile of CL from mitochondria isolated from
wild-type cells expressing GST-Ygr110wp (lane 1) or GST (lane
2). White bars, FA profile of CL isolated from wild-type
expressing GST only; black bars, FA profile of CL from wild-type
overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp. Data are expressed as percentage of total acyl
chains in CL and represent means ± S.D. of at least three independent
experiments. Overexpression of GST-Ygr110wp did not change the fatty acid
profile of cardiolipin in wild type.Phospholipase A activity of GST-Ygr110wp. Mitochondrial fractions
were used for PLA activity assays as described under “Experimental
Procedures.” A, the specific activity of GST-Ygr110wp toward
sn2-arachidonoyl phosphatidylcholine was 0.767 nmol/min.mg of
protein, which corresponds to a 3.3-fold induction over the control and is
2-fold higher compared with wild-type mitochondria. Data represent means
± S.D. of at least three independent experiments. B,
CL-specific phospholipase A activity of GST-Ygr110wp. Lane 1,
mitochondria from ygr110wΔ mutant cells harboring pGST-YGR110W.
Lane 2, mitochondria from ygr110wΔ mutant cells
harboring pYEX4T-1. Lane 3, mitochondria from ygr110wΔ
mutant cells harboring pGST-YGR110W without exogenous CL. Lane 4,
mitochondria from wild-type cells. Lane 5, lipid standards;
CL, cardiolipin; MLCL, monolysocardiolipin; PA,
phosphatidic acid. Experiments were performed three times with two independent
mitochondrial preparations.To confirm that Ygr110wp also acts as a CL-specific phospholipase A in
vitro we analyzed its activity against bacterial cardiolipin, which
contains 27% C16:0 (Avanti Polar Lipids). Mitochondrial extracts of
mutant cells overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp led to a substantial conversion of CL
to MLCL, which was not observed in the control extracts from
ygr110wΔ cells expressing GST only
(Fig. 5). In the
absence of bacterial cardiolipin MLCL was not detectable in mitochondrial
extracts of mutant cells overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp. A weak band of MLCL was
observed with mitochondria from wild-type cells under the assay conditions
(Fig. 5). These
results further demonstrate that Ygr110wp indeed functions as a CL-specific
phospholipase A.Determination of MLCL in BY4742 and Δ,
Δ, and
ΔΔ mutant cells.
Lipid extracts of the mitochondrial fractions were subjected to
one-dimensional TLC as described under “Experimental Procedures.”
One representative experiment from triplicate determinations from at least two
independent mitochondrial preparations is shown. A, accumulation of
MLCL was observed in the mutant strain taz1Δ (lane 3).
No MLCL was detectable in the mutant strains ygr110wΔ (lane
2) and taz1Δygr110wΔ (lane 4).
Wild-type BY4742 (lane 1). B, overexpression of GST-Ygr110wp
in the double mutant taz1Δygr110wΔ led to an
accumulation of MLCL (lane 2). Double mutant
taz1Δygr110wΔ cells expressing GST only
(lane 1). C, lipid composition. Spots on TLC were quantified
using ImageJ software (NIH). CL, cardiolipin; MLCL,
monolysocardiolipin; PA, phosphatidic acid; PE,
phosphatidylethanolamine; PG, phosphatidylglycerol; PS,
phosphatidylserine; PI, phosphatidylinositol; PC,
phosphatidylcholine. Data represent means ± S.D. of at least three
independent experiments.Ygr110wp Genetically and Biochemically Interacts with
Tafazzin—Recently, it was shown that a deletion of the
TAZ1 gene in yeast resulted in a decrease of unsaturated fatty acids
and an accumulation of MLCL
(15). Taz1p was therefore
proposed to be involved in the reacylation of MLCL specifically with
unsaturated fatty acids. Because ygr110wΔ mutants displayed a
similar reduction in unsaturated fatty acids of CL
(Fig. 3), we tested them for a
potential accumulation of MLCL, as described by Vaden et al.
(27). In contrast to the
taz1Δ mutant, MLCL was not detectable in mitochondria of
ygr110wΔ (Fig.
6, lane 2), and even the low level of MLCL
observed in wild-type mitochondria was absent in the mutant. Strikingly, the
accumulation of MLCL in taz1Δ mutant was suppressed when both
genes, YGR110W and TAZ1, were deleted
(Fig. 6, lane
4). Deletion of both genes resulted in a mitochondrial phenotype and
growth of the double mutant was severely retarded on non-fermentable carbon
sources at 30 °C (Fig.
2). Because the level of CL was higher in the
ygr110wΔtaz1Δ double mutant than in the
taz1Δ single mutant, this phenotype is not due to an overall
reduced CL content; the taz1Δ single mutant showed only a weak
growth phenotype at 30 °C (Figs.
2 and
6). These findings
confirm that both proteins function in the same pathway.
FIGURE 6.
Determination of MLCL in BY4742 and Δ,
Δ, and
ΔΔ mutant cells.
Lipid extracts of the mitochondrial fractions were subjected to
one-dimensional TLC as described under “Experimental Procedures.”
One representative experiment from triplicate determinations from at least two
independent mitochondrial preparations is shown. A, accumulation of
MLCL was observed in the mutant strain taz1Δ (lane 3).
No MLCL was detectable in the mutant strains ygr110wΔ (lane
2) and taz1Δygr110wΔ (lane 4).
Wild-type BY4742 (lane 1). B, overexpression of GST-Ygr110wp
in the double mutant taz1Δygr110wΔ led to an
accumulation of MLCL (lane 2). Double mutant
taz1Δygr110wΔ cells expressing GST only
(lane 1). C, lipid composition. Spots on TLC were quantified
using ImageJ software (NIH). CL, cardiolipin; MLCL,
monolysocardiolipin; PA, phosphatidic acid; PE,
phosphatidylethanolamine; PG, phosphatidylglycerol; PS,
phosphatidylserine; PI, phosphatidylinositol; PC,
phosphatidylcholine. Data represent means ± S.D. of at least three
independent experiments.
Lack of any MLCL in the ygr110wΔ mutant strongly suggests
that it is not defective in a pathway that operates in parallel to Taz1p, as
an acyltransferase. Moreover, expression of GST-Ygr110wp in the
ygr110wΔtaz1Δ double mutant led to an
accumulation of MLCL (Fig.
6, lane 2) and thus provides further strong
evidence that Ygr110wp indeed generates the substrate for the Taz1p reaction,
in vivo.
DISCUSSION
In this work we show that Ygr110wp is part of the remodeling process of CL,
which involves deacylation-reacylation of premature CL
(9). The dimeric phospholipid
CL is predominantly enriched in the inner membrane of mitochondria, and its
fatty acid pattern displays a high degree of unsaturation compared with other
phospholipids (4). Defects in
CL remodeling were shown to be causative for the Barth syndrome, a severe
disease that may lead to cardiac failure in childhood
(13). The Barth syndrome
results from mutations in the TAZ gene, which leads to a dramatic
decrease in total CL, an accumulation of MLCL, and absence of unsaturated CL
species (15).Remodeling of acyl chains in phospholipids involves sequential actions of
phospholipases and acyl transferases
(33). The mitochondrial yeast
protein Taz1p was shown to function as a transacylase with substrate
specificity for either MLCL or lysophosphatidylcholine
(14). Due to the fact that
TAZ1 deletion mutants accumulate MLCL, Taz1p was proposed to catalyze
the reacylation of MLCL (15).
The first step in the remodeling cycle, however, requires a phospholipase
activity that generates MLCL.We found that the previously uncharacterized yeast protein Ygr110wp
functions as mitochondrial phospholipase. Overexpression of a GST-Ygr110w
fusion protein stimulated mitochondrial phospholipase activity >3-fold in a
commercial in vitro assay that relied on sn2-arachidonoyl
phosphatidylcholine as the substrate. Furthermore, Ygr110wp also showed
significant CL-specific phospholipase activity against CL enriched in
C16:0 in vitro. Additional evidence for this CL-specific
PLA activity is derived from the following data: (i) The localization of
Ygr110wp to mitochondria indicates that this enzyme is involved in a
mitochondrial process. (ii) The mutant ygr110wΔ shows a
specific deficiency in CL fatty acid composition that is not observed in other
cellular or mitochondrial phospholipids. Thus mitochondrial phospholipids
other than CL can be excluded as substrates for Ygr110wp. (iii) A deletion of
YGR110W in a taz1Δ mutant background prevents the
formation of MLCL that accumulates in the taz1Δ mutant lacking
the CL specific transacylase. (vi) Overexpression of GST-Ygr110wp in a
ygr110wΔtaz1Δ double mutant induces accumulation
of MLCL, which requires PLA activity.Furthermore, we show that Ygr110wp preferentially catalyzes the removal of
C16:0 from premature CL in vivo. A deletion of
YGR110W resulted in a 2.4-fold increase of palmitic acid in CL, on
the expense of the unsaturated fatty acid species. In addition, overexpression
of GST-Ygr110wp in ygr110wΔ mutant strains reduced the high
amount of C16:0 in cardiolipin of mutant cells to wild-type
level.Interestingly, we detected an elevated relative amount of C18:0
of in CL, at the expense of C16:1, in ygr110wΔ
mutant cells overexpressing GST-Ygr110wp. In contrast, no changes in CL fatty
acids were observed in the wild-type upon GST-Ygr110wp overexpression. From
these findings we assume that CL remodeling is dependent on a stoichiometric
balance of all components involved, perhaps in a specific lipid remodeling
complex.A deletion of YGR110W resulted in an aberrant fatty acid pattern
in CL, but total CL was not decreased and no accumulation of MLCL was
detected, which is in contrast to taz1Δ mutants
(15). In addition, we did not
observe significant growth defects on media containing ethanol or glycerol as
carbon sources for the ygr110wΔ single mutant, indicating that
an increased level of saturated fatty acids in CL of the mutant is not
sufficient to impair mitochondrial function. However, we observed a severe
growth defect on non-fermentable carbon sources for the
ygr110wΔtaz1Δ double mutant, which proves that
Ygr110wp and Taz1p are involved in the same pathway.We propose that Ygr110wp functions as the phospholipase upstream of Taz1p,
generating MLCL for Taz1p-dependent reacylation with unsaturated fatty acids.
The preferred removal of C16:0 from cardiolipin by Ygr110wp is
contradictory to a recent model for the exchange of acyl groups in de
novo synthesized CL (16).
The authors suggested that specific fatty acids may accumulate in CL by
concerted action of acyl-specific inflow and nonspecific outflow. On the basis
of our in vivo results the outflow of acyl residues from CL has also
to be considered a specific process. We propose a model in which enzymes with
phospholipase A or B activity specifically detach saturated C16:0
or C18:0 acyl chains from de novo synthesized CL to
generate MLCL, which will be subsequently reacylated specifically by
transacylases, such as Taz1p. Thus the exchange of the CL acyl chains may
require the coordinated action of multiple phospholipases and transacylases,
each of them showing specificities for degree of unsaturation but also for
acyl-chain length. Cld1 (cardiolipin-specific
deacylase 1) encoded by gene YGR110W is the first
phospholipase activity identified so far that preferentially removes
C16:0 acyl chains from cardiolipin.
Authors: Susan S Bird; Vasant R Marur; Matthew J Sniatynski; Heather K Greenberg; Bruce S Kristal Journal: Anal Chem Date: 2010-12-30 Impact factor: 6.986
Authors: Lucia Pokorná; Petra Čermáková; Anton Horváth; Matthew G Baile; Steven M Claypool; Peter Griač; Jan Malínský; Mária Balážová Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta Date: 2015-10-19
Authors: John J Maguire; Yulia Y Tyurina; Dariush Mohammadyani; Aleksandr A Kapralov; Tamil S Anthonymuthu; Feng Qu; Andrew A Amoscato; Louis J Sparvero; Vladimir A Tyurin; Joan Planas-Iglesias; Rong-Rong He; Judith Klein-Seetharaman; Hülya Bayır; Valerian E Kagan Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Biol Lipids Date: 2016-08-04 Impact factor: 4.698
Authors: Matthew G Baile; Murugappan Sathappa; Ya-Wen Lu; Erin Pryce; Kevin Whited; J Michael McCaffery; Xianlin Han; Nathan N Alder; Steven M Claypool Journal: J Biol Chem Date: 2013-11-27 Impact factor: 5.157