A survey of the Arabidopsis thaliana mitochondrial phosphoproteome

Jun Ito, Nicolas L. Taylor, Ian Castleden, Wolfram Weckwerth, A. Harvey Millar, Joshua L. Heazlewood (Corresponding author)

    Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

    Abstract

    Plant mitochondria play central roles in cellular energy production, metabolism and stress responses. Recent phosphoproteomic studies in mammalian and yeast mitochondria have presented evidence indicating that protein phosphorylation is a likely regulatory mechanism across a broad range of important mitochondrial processes. This study investigated protein phosphorylation in purified mitochondria from cell suspensions of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana using affinity enrichment and proteomic tools. Eighteen putative phosphoproteins consisting of mitochondrial metabolic enzymes, HSPs, a protease and several proteins of unknown function were detected on 2-DE separations of Arabidopsis mitochondrial proteins and affinity-enriched phosphoproteins using the Pro-Q Diamond phospho-specific in-gel dye. Comparisons with mitochondrial phosphoproteomes of yeast and mouse indicate that these three species share few validated phosphoproteins. Phosphorylation sites for seven of the eighteen mitochondrial proteins were characterized by titanium dioxide enrichment and MS/MS. In the process, 71 phosphopeptides from Arabidopsis proteins which are not present in mitochondria but found as contaminants in various types of mitochondrial preparations were also identified, indicating the low level of phosphorylation of mitochondrial components compared with other cellular components in Arabidopsis. Information gained from this study provides a better understanding of protein phosphorylation at both the subcellular and the cellular level in Arabidopsis.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)4229-4240
    Number of pages12
    JournalProteomics
    Volume9
    Issue number17
    Publication statusPublished - 2009

    Austrian Fields of Science 2012

    • 106002 Biochemistry
    • 106037 Proteomics

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