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Plant Physiol, December 2001, Vol. 127, pp. 1711-1727
Analysis of the Arabidopsis Mitochondrial Proteome1
A. Harvey
Millar,*
Lee J.
Sweetlove,
Philippe
Giegé, and
Christopher J.
Leaver
Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine and
Dentistry, and the Plant Sciences Group, Faculty of Agriculture, The
University of Western Australia, Crawley 6009, Western Australia,
Australia (A.H.M.); and Department of Plant Sciences, University of
Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3RB, United Kingdom (L.J.S., P.G.,
C.J.L.)
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ABSTRACT |
The complete set of nuclear genes that encode
proteins targeted to mitochondria in plants is currently undefined and
thus the full range of mitochondrial functions in plants is unknown. Analysis of two-dimensional gel separations of Arabidopsis cell culture
mitochondrial protein revealed approximately 100 abundant proteins and
250 low-abundance proteins. Comparison of subfractions of mitochondrial
protein on two-dimensional gels provided information on the soluble,
membrane, or integral membrane locations of this protein set. A total
of 170 protein spots were excised, trypsin-digested, and
matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time of flight mass
spectrometry spectra obtained. Using this dataset, 91 of the proteins
were identified by searching translated Arabidopsis genomic databases.
Of this set, 81 have defined functions based on sequence comparison.
These functions include respiratory electron transport, tricarboxylic
acid cycle metabolism, amino acid metabolism, protein import,
processing, and assembly, transcription, membrane transport, and
antioxidant defense. A total of 10 spectra were matched to Arabidopsis
putative open reading frames for which no specific function has been
determined. A total of 64 spectra did not match to an identified open
reading frame. Analysis of full-length putative protein sequences using
bioinformatic tools to predict subcellular targeting (TargetP, Psort,
and MitoProt) revealed significant variation in predictions, and also a
lack of mitochondrial targeting prediction for several characterized mitochondrial proteins.
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INTRODUCTION |
The mitochondrion is the organelle
within the eukaryotic cell that is primarily concerned with the
synthesis of ATP in the fundamental process known as respiration. The
origins of this organelle can be traced back to an event in which a
prokaryotic cell was engulfed by another prokaryote to form a cell
lineage containing two independent genomes. Over time, these genomes
became codependent and mitochondria lost the ability to be viable
organisms outside the host cell. A substantial transfer of genetic
information occurred from the mitochondrial to the nuclear genome
during this time. Today, it is predicted that mitochondria synthesize
2% to 5% of the proteins required for their function, with the
remaining 95% to 98% of proteins required encoded by the nuclear
genome and targeted back to the mitochondria as protein precursors
using encrypted targeting information in the protein sequence (Gray et
al., 1999 ). The detection of these encryptions and thus identification of the full set of these genes within the nuclear genome is a major
challenge for biologists.
The recent sequencing of whole genomes has encouraged an increasing
effort to develop bioinformatic tools to predict the cellular localization of putative protein sequences. Psort was developed as an
expert system that uses a set of 100 "if-then"-type of rules based
on analysis of characterized protein sequences from a variety of
subcellular locations (Nakai and Kanehisa, 1992 ). MitoProt was
developed to predict mitochondrial targeting and presequence cleavage
sites based on a set of 47 known characteristics of presequences and
cleavage sites (Claros and Vincens, 1996 ). More recently, TargetP,
based on neural network programming, was developed to predict targeting
of protein sequences to chloroplasts, mitochondria, and the secretory
system using a knowledge based derived from Swiss-Prot sequence entries
(Emanuelsson et al., 2000 ).
The full sequences of the five chromosomes from the model plant
Arabidopsis were recently published (The Arabidopsis Genome Initiative,
2000 ). The analysis of this data included a full genome analysis using
TargetP that predicted the number of nuclear-encoded, mitochondrial-targeted gene products. This number could be as high as
2,897, or, using a >0.95 specificity cut-off in TargetP, it could be
as low at 349. The breadth of this prediction range (8.1-fold) was in
stark contrast to the range for chloroplast targeting (0.7-fold) and
secretory pathway targeting (0.07-fold) when using the same high- and
low-stringency settings in TargetP.
Analysis of the presequences that direct proteins to mitochondria
in plants shows substantial differences to the consensus sequences
present in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and
mammals. This means that identifications in plants cannot simply rely
on existing bioinformatic tools (Sjoling and Glaser, 1998 ). In
addition, a range of proteins that are known to be targeted to plant
mitochondria do not utilize cleavable N-terminal presequences and
thus remain undetected by algorithms or training regimes based on
identification of these signal peptides. Examples include a range of
outer membrane proteins and also the inner membrane superfamily of
carrier proteins (Laloi, 1999 ). All the prediction programs available
have been largely established and/or trained on non-plant sequences,
and thus the robustness of these tools for prediction in plants is still uncertain.
Density gradient purification of plant mitochondria has been optimized
from a range of plant tissues and allows the rapid and high-purity
recovery of these organelles (Day et al., 1985 ; Neuberger, 1985 ).
Biochemical investigations have revealed that isolated plant
mitochondria share many similarities to those from animals and fungi.
However, plant mitochondria also contain additional features such as
non-phosphorylating bypasses of the electron transport chain,
specialized metabolite carriers, and enzymes involved in the synthesis
of folate, lipoic acid, and vitamin C (Rebeille et al., 1997 ; Bartoli
et al., 2000 ; Gueguen et al., 2000 ). Only a few of the nuclear genes
encoding proteins that maintain these unique functions have been
identified. In addition, the predictions by TargetP suggest that an
array of other proteins whose functions have yet to be characterized
are present in the nuclear genome of plants.
Several analyses of subcellular proteomes from Arabidopsis have
been reported for the plasma membrane and endoplasmic reticulum systems
(Santoni et al., 1998 ; Prime et al., 2000 ) and the chloroplast (Peltier
et al., 2000 ). These studies have used a combination of Edman
degradation and mass spectrometry (MS)/MS-based sequencing to
identify proteins from two-dimensional gels. To determine which putative proteins from the Arabidopsis genome sequence represent constitutively expressed proteins for mitochondrial function, we have
used two-dimensional analysis of purified Arabidopsis mitochondria
coupled with peptide mass fingerprinting identification. This approach
aims to identify proteins localized in plant mitochondria, thus
providing new insights into the function of plant mitochondria and also
providing a larger set of experimentally characterized mitochondrial
proteins. This set of experimental knowledge could be used to improve
neural network and/or rule based programming for targeting prediction
of products from plant nuclear genomes.
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RESULTS |
Isolation of High-Purity Mitochondria from Arabidopsis Cell
Culture
The integrity of a subcellular proteome, such as that of
mitochondria, is largely dependent on the purification of the isolated compartment away from other cellular contaminants. We have used two
Percoll gradient density separations that yield mitochondria that are
essentially free of contamination by cytosol, peroxisomes, plastids,
and other membranes (Fig. 1). On the
first step-gradient, mitochondria band at the interface of the 23% and
40% Percoll steps (corresponding to the peak of cytochrome
c oxidase activity in fractions 26-35; Fig. 1A). These
mitochondria were contaminated by peroxisomes and plastids as revealed
by the activity of catalase and alkaline pyrophosphatase, respectively.
However, alcohol dehydrogenase could not be detected in these
fractions, indicating the absence of contamination by cytosol.
Interestingly, plastids resolved into three separate populations, and
the presence of carotenoids (a commonly used marker for plastids) only
correlated with one of the plastid peaks (fractions 13-20; data not
shown). Thus, for Arabidopsis cells, the presence of carotenoids is not
a reliable marker for the presence of all types of plastids. To further
purify the mitochondria, a second self-forming gradient consisting of 28% Percoll was employed (Fig. 1B). Mitochondria formed a broad band
in the upper part of the gradient, corresponding to a peak of
cytochrome c oxidase activity at fraction 5. The
mitochondrial band was free of contamination by peroxisomes (catalase
activity was not coincident with cytochrome c oxidase
activity, instead forming a peak lower down the gradient between
fractions 23-29). A small peak of alkaline pyrophosphatase activity
did coincide with the mitochondrial peak, indicating a slight
contamination by plastids. However, based on the activity of the marker
enzymes in fractions 1 through 14 in comparison with that present in
the initial cell extract, the yield of mitochondria was 12.4%, whereas the yield of plastids in the same fractions was only 0.2%. This level
of contamination is sufficiently minor that it is unlikely that we
would detect plastid proteins in two-dimensional gels of the
mitochondrial fraction.

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Figure 1.
Isolation of Arabidopsis mitochondria by density
centrifugation. The organelle pellet from homogenized Arabidopsis cell
culture was loaded onto a Percoll step gradient consisting of steps of
40% (fractions 31-35), 23% (fractions 11-30), and 18% Percoll
(fractions 1-10; A). After centrifugation, mitochondria were recovered
from the 40%:23% interface (fractions 26-35) and were loaded onto a
self-forming Percoll gradient containing 28% Percoll (B).
One-milliliter fractions were collected from both gradients (from top
to bottom) and the activities of cytochrome c oxidase ( ),
catalase ( ), alkaline pyrophosphatase ( ), and alcohol
dehydrogenase ( ) were assayed in each fraction. Values are expressed
as a percentage of the total activity in the initial cell
extract.
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Integrity and Function of Isolated Arabidopsis
Mitochondria
We assayed the integrity and function of the purified mitochondria
to ensure that proteins were not being lost by rupture during isolation
and that key functions were maintained. The outer membrane of
mitochondrial samples was found to be 97% intact based on the latency
of cytochrome c oxidase activity initiated by exogenously added cytochrome c (Table I).
Whole electron transport chain activities showed that oxygen
consumption by the mitochondria could be supported by succinate,
external NADH, or a combination of malate and pyruvate. Oxygen
consumption supported by each of these substrates was significantly and
transiently stimulated by addition of ADP. These data suggested the
presence and function of the electron transport chain, the
F1F0-ATP synthase, the
tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle in the mitochondrial matrix, and the
integrity of the inner membrane. Oxygen consumption by mitochondrial
samples was largely inhibited by addition of the cytochrome oxidase
inhibitor, KCN, and the small remaining rate was inhibited by
n-propylgallate (nPG), an alternative oxidase inhibitor
(Table I).
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Table I.
Oxygen consumption by isolated Arabidopsis
mitochondria following addition of different substrates, effectors, and
inhibitors
Respiratory assays were performed according to "Materials and
Methods." Means ± SD (n = 3) for oxygen
consumption rates are presented and outer membrane integrity is
presented as a percentage of intact mitochondria.
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Fractionation of Mitochondrial Proteins
Mitochondrial protein samples were further fractionated based on
the degree of membrane association (DMA). Total protein (A), soluble
protein (B), membrane protein (C), and integral membrane protein (D)
samples were separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (Fig.
2, A-D). This analysis
revealed varying patterns of protein spots in each gel corresponding to
the relative abundance of each protein in the different compartments.
Based on these gels, an overlay of the whole mitochondrial protein gel
was made with protein spots highlighted that could be clearly
identified by spot abundance changes to be peaking in amount in a
particular fraction. In total, 163 protein spots were tracked for
location in this manner. A set of 43 protein spots were identified as
soluble proteins (S; present in A, peaked in B, and largely absent in C
and D). A total of 21 protein spots were identified as peripheral
membrane proteins (P; present in A, absent in B, peaking in abundance
in C, but absent in D). Only 18 protein spots were deemed integral
membrane (I; present in A, absent in B, and present in C and D in
similar abundance). An additional 81 spots could not be easily assigned to any group as they appeared in abundance in several fractions (circled, unmarked). Allocation of protein spots to DMA groupings was
based on densitometry analysis of gels by ImageMaster two-dimensional analysis software (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Sydney, Australia). Allocations to S, P, and I were only made if a protein spot abundance was more than 5-fold in the "present" versus "absent" gels for each class. For example, the abundance of an S protein in A and B was more than 5-fold that in C and D. The S, P, and I classes and no class (N) are also annotated on Table
II in the DMA column.

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Figure 2.
Two-dimensional separations of Arabidopsis
mitochondrial proteins (pI 3-10) fractionated on the degree of
membrane association. A, Total mitochondrial proteins; B, soluble
proteins; C, total membrane proteins; D, integral membrane proteins
based on Na2CO3 treatment;
and E, predicted localization of 165 protein spots on the basis of
distribution in A through D. Circled, black spots are annotated as I,
S, or P. Circled, unannotated gray spots could not be assigned as I, S,
or P based on their distribution between the gels. Numbers on the
x axis are pI and numbers on the y axis are
apparent molecular mass (kilodaltons) in E. A through D, Ticks marks
show the position of pI 3 to 10 and the six molecular mass markers
presented in E.
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Table II.
Identification of two-dimensional separated protein
spots from purified Arabidopsis mitochondria using matrix-assisted
laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-ToF) spectra of
trypsinated peptides matched against TrEMBL (TE), Genbank (GB), and the
Arabidopsis Information Resource (AT) database (DB) entries
No. MP, No. of peptides matching ± 50 ppm to predicted protein
sequence; percentage covered, percentage of predicted protein sequence
covered by matched peptides; predicted molecular mass and pI of matched
sequence and observed MM and pI of the sample is from the gel in Figure
3. TargetP, Predicted localization of sequence by TargetP; M1-5,
mitochondrial; C1-5, chloroplast; S1-5, secretory pathway; 1-5,
other (1, high probability; 5, low probability); MitoProt, probability
of mitochondrial targeting (P = 0-1); Psort, predicted
localization; Mma, mitochondrial matrix; Cls, chloroplast; C, cytosol;
N, nucleus; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; PM, plasma membrane; P,
peroxisome (P = 0-1). DMA, Degree of membrane
association as determined from Figure 2; GRAVY, grand average of
hydropathicity index calculated using the matched protein sequence.
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MALDI-ToF Peptide Mass Fingerprinting of Arabidopsis Mitochondrial
Proteome
A set of 170 protein spots, including those identified in Figure 2
and several other less-abundant proteins, were chosen because they were
reproducibly observed in the mitochondrial proteome throughout the
different experiments undertaken. These protein spots were excised from
whole mitochondria profile gels and were in-gel digested for further MS
analysis of the resulting peptide fragments (Fig.
3). MALDI-ToF provided a peptide mass
spectrum for each protein spot. From this total of 170 proteins, 15 samples provided poor spectra that could not be used for further
analysis (6, 29, 36, 42, 52, 63, 64, 70, 71, 75, 113, 114, 123, 134, and 135), and the remaining 155 were used for database (DB) searches to
identify genes encoding proteins with similar peptide mass fingerprints. A total of 81 of the spectra were matched to 68 predicted
Arabidopsis protein sequences in the DB with known function based on
functional studies or sequence comparison with proteins of known
function (Table II). A further 10 spectra matched to nine predicted
Arabidopsis protein sequences, largely from genome sequencing for which
no function has been identified by functional studies or comparative
genomics. The apparent and predicted molecular mass and pI of the
matched samples are consistent with expectation. In cases where a
mitochondrial targeting presequence is present, we expect a decrease of
1 to 4 kD between predicted and apparent molecular mass, and we expect
a more major shift in the pI of the protein in the acidic direction
following the removal of the typically basic presequence. In cases
where no presequence is present (such as the porins, TOM40, and
aconitases), the apparent and predicted molecular mass and pI values
are much closer. Overall, the sequences, excluding those known not to
contain presequences, apparent molecular masses were 1.5 ± 0.5 kD
smaller than precursor proteins predicted masses. The pI values of
protein spots observed on gels were also shifted 0.85 ± 0.15 units in the acidic direction compared with predicted precursor protein
pI values (Table II).

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Figure 3.
Two-dimensional separation of Arabidopsis total
mitochondrial proteins (pI 3-10). A total of 170 protein spots from
this map were excised, digested, and analyzed by MALDI-ToF to yield a
peptide mass fingerprint for DB searching. Numbers indicate spot number
for comparison with text and Table II. Numbers on the x axis
are pI and numbers on the y axis are apparent molecular mass
(kilodaltons).
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Membrane Channels/Carriers
The voltage-dependent anion-selective channel proteins, or porins,
allow channel transport of small molecules (<8 kD) across the outer
mitochondrial membrane. Four proteins in the Arabidopsis mitochondrial
profile (14, 57, 96, and 128) were matched to two separate Arabidopsis
genes encoding this class of channel protein. All four of these
proteins were identified in the integral membrane protein set based on
the DMA analysis of Figure 2.
Protein Import, Processing, Chaperonins, and
Degradation
Three types of the classical heat shock/chaperonin proteins were
identified, those in the 60-, 70-, and 90-kD classes (45, 97, 32, 99, 28, 30, and 31). The partner protein of HSP60, known as HSP10, was not
identified; it would have been too small (approximately 10 kD) to be
observed on the SDS-PAGE gels in these experiments. The new class of
molecular chaperonins recently characterized in mammalian mitochondria,
known as prohibitins (Nijtmans et al., 2000 ), were also identified in
our mitochondrial samples. A total of five prohibitin-like proteins
were identified (13, 58, 156, 166, and 169) and matched as the products
of five separate genes in Arabidopsis. In addition, the TOM40 receptor
for protein import on the outer mitochondrial membrane was identified
(98), along with both subunits of the mitochondrial-processing
peptidase responsible for removal of N-terminal targeting presequences
from mitochondrial proteins (17, 25, and 168). A clpP-like
ATP-dependent protease probably involved in proteolysis in mitochondria
(65) was also identified. Recently, antibodies raised to a recombinant
Arabidopsis protein, designated by homology to be a putative plant
mitochondrial clpP, have been used to localize a cross-reacting protein
in mitochondria from pea (Pisum sativum; Halperin et al.,
2001 ). In yeast, clpP-like proteases are known to be associated in
large supercomplexes with prohibitins in mitochondria, and genetic
evidence suggests prohibitins have a negative regulatory effect on
protease function (Steglich et al., 1999 ). Further investigation of a
prohibitin/ATP-dependent protease complex in plant mitochondria is warranted.
TCA Cycle Enzymes
Proteins from all of the TCA cycle enzyme complexes were
identified, and these included subunits of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (44, 132, 18, 15, 108, and 86), citrate synthase (104 and 33),
isocitrate dehydrogenase (112), 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase (15, 108, and 86), succinyl coenzyme A (CoA) ligase (3 and 100), succinate
dehydrogenase (46), fumarase (87), and malate dehydrogenase (56 and
34). The two pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 subunits (44 and 132) share
87% sequence identity and are only 50% to 52% identical to the
plastidic E1 -subunit sequence (GB U80185), suggesting they are
mitochondrial E1 subunits. Notable absences from the list include
NAD-malic enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of malate to pyruvate in
the plant TCA cycle. The activity of this enzyme was present in
Arabidopsis mitochondria (data not shown). Previous studies by several
of the authors in potato mitochondria showed that the - and
-subunits of NAD-malic enzyme enter two-dimensional gels and
cross-react with antibodies raised to NAD-malic enzyme (Jenner et al.,
2001 ). None of the E2 subunits of pyruvate or 2-oxoglutarate
dehydrogenase complexes were identified, although these proteins
are present in two-dimensional gels in mitochondrial samples from other
plant species (data not shown). The modification of these proteins by
lipoic acid moieties might explain why they are not identified by mass
fingerprinting, as these modifications will alter the apparent
molecular masses of peptides derived from these protein sequences.
Aconitase
In yeast, a single nuclear gene encodes aconitase, and
"inefficient import" of this protein is believed to explain the
cytosolic and mitochondrial localization of this protein (Gangloff et
al., 1990 ). It had been suggested that a single gene also encoded
aconitase in Arabidopsis (Peyret et al., 1995 ); however, subsequent
genome sequencing has shown there are four aconitase genes in this
plant species. We have identified four aconitase proteins (101, 116, 165, and 21) as the products of two aconitase genes (Q9SZ36 and Q9SIB9)
in the mitochondrial profile. The predicted protein sequences from
these genes are only 75% and 84% identical to the original aconitase
cloned and entered into SWISS-PROT (Q42560) as the cytoplasmic
aconitase hydratase by Peyret et al. (1995) . Neither of the two
predicted protein products has putative mitochondrial targeting
sequences. The mechanism of import of these large proteins into the
mitochondrial matrix in the absence of a presequence is not known.
Lipoamide Dehydrogenase
Two distinct lipoamide dehydrogenase proteins were identified as
the products of Q9M5K2 and AAF34795. These predicted
proteins are identical in length (507 amino acids) and share 94%
identity at the amino acid level. The power of peptide mass
fingerprinting is shown by the ease of differentiation of these two
proteins by peptide matches. Only four peptides in both spectra of
identical size were matched to identical sequence in both predicted
protein sequences, an additional six to eight peptides in each case
matched to regions with one or two amino acid substitutions altering
peptides mass in each predicted protein sequence (data not shown). The presence of these two mitochondrial proteins is in contrast to a
long-standing debate in the literature about the number of lipoamide genes and protein products that serve as the dehydrogenases for the
2-oxo acid multienzyme complexes and Gly decarboxylase complex in
mitochondria and chloroplasts. It has been held that a single product
of a single gene encoding lipoamide dehydrogenase was targeted to both
organelles and partnered all these multienzyme complexes. Recently, two
genes encoding plastid specific lipoamide dehydrogenases have been
identified (Lutziger and Oliver, 2000 ). The same authors cloned and
entered both of these mitochondrial lipoamide dehydrogenases sequences
(Q9M5K2 and AAF34795) into public DBs in 2000. This is the
first evidence to our knowledge that these two genes are translated to
form lipoamide dehydrogenase proteins that accumulate in plant
mitochondria. Further, it appears there is significantly more
Q9M5K2 than AAF34795 protein in our mitochondrial samples
(Fig. 3).
Electron Transport Chain
Representative subunits from each of the classical electron
transport chain complexes were identified. These included five subunits
of complex 1 (NADH-ubiquinone [UQ] oxidoreductase 72, 80 20, 22, and
91), three subunits of complex III (UQ-cytc oxidoreductase 171, 17, 168, and 25), five subunits of complex V (ATP synthetase complex, 1, 4, 24, 23, and 164), and one subunit each from complex II (succinate
dehydrogenase, 46) and complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase,
151). No sequence entry for the -subunit of the mitochondrial ATP
synthase from Arabidopsis could be found by the authors. Matches to the
spectrum from spot 23 were found to the -subunit from a wide range
of other plant species; in Table II, the -subunit from Sorghum
bicolor was matched to 205. The reason for the absence of an entry
for this major mitochondrial protein from National Center for
Biotechnology Information, Translated European Molecular Biology
Laboratory Nucleotide Sequence Database, and the The Arabidopsis Information Resource DBs is unclear. No peptide fingerprint spectra matched to protein sequences for the non-phosphorylating bypasses of
the plant electron transport chains, notably the alternative oxidase
protein sequences (Saisho et al., 1997 ) or the recently identified
putative rotonone-insensitive NADH-dehydrogenase protein sequences
(Rasmusson et al., 1999 ). This absence was despite the evidence from
Table I of the operation of both of these bypasses in intact
Arabidopsis mitochondria. A protein with significant homology with the
mitochondrial class of ferrodoxins in mammals known as adrenodoxins was
also found (82). In mammals, this class of ferrodoxin specifically
function in a redox chain with an adrenodoxin reductase to reduce
cytochrome P450s in mitochondria (Solish et al., 1988 ). Some evidence
for a mitochondrial cytochrome P450 in plants has been presented
(Lindemann and Luickner, 1997 ), but none of the large number of P450
genes in Arabidopsis have been characterized as mitochondrial, and a
redox partner for this adrenodoxin in plant mitochondria remains
elusive. The mitochondrial matrix isoform of superoxide dismutase with
Mn at its active site was also identified (10), as was a
methyltransferase involved in the final step of UQ synthesis (79).
Amino Acid Metabolism
A variety of enzymes associated with amino acid metabolism were
also identified. Ala and Asp aminotransferases (111 and 154) allow the
interconversion of TCA cycle intermediates with amino acid pools.
Several broad range enzymes were also identified that have the
potential to be involved in a variety of amino acid degradation pathways with an array of different substrates; these include the two
aldehyde dehydrogenases (158 and 16) and enoyl CoA hydratase (141). The
aldehyde dehydrogenases function broadly in amino acid and fatty acid
metabolism to catalyze the oxidation of aldehyde or oxo groups to form
carboxylates through the reduction of NAD(P) to NAD(P) H. Interestingly, it was a putative aldehyde dehydrogenase that was
identified as the rf2 nuclear restorer of the T-cytoplasm maize
(Zea mays) cytoplasmic male sterility line (Cui et al., 1996 ). Enoyl CoA hydratase catalyzes the removal of water from a
variety of unsaturated acyl-CoAs in the degradation pathways of Val,
Leu, iso-Leu, Lys, Trp, and -Ala. Methylmalonate semi-aldehyde dehydrogenase (27) acts downstream of enoyl coA hydratase in the catabolism of branched chain amino acids.
Pyruvate is converted to Cys via the intermediate, 3-mercaptopyruvate,
and Ser is converted to Cys via an acetyltransferase and Cys synthase.
The presence of 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfur transferase (76), Cys
synthase (54), and acetyltransferase-like proteins (11 and 130)
suggests that such metabolic pathways may be in action in plant
mitochondria. One of the substrates for 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfur
transferase is hydrogen cyanide, which is also a potent inhibitor of
respiration by the cytochrome pathway. It would be interesting to
consider if the operation of this metabolic pathway may be correlated
with the expression of the alternative oxidase, which is insensitive to
cyanide and thus able to maintain electron transport. Recently, a
-cyano-Ala synthase, which also uses hydrogen cyanide as a substrate
and is structurally related to the Cys synthases, was identified as a
mitochondrial protein in plants (Hatzfeld et al., 2000 ).
-Aminobutyric Acid (GABA) Shunt Metabolism
Several enzymes potentially involved in a GABA shunt of
carbon intermediates between 2-oxoglutarate and succinate were also identified. Glu dehydrogenase (40 and 43) forms Glu from 2-oxoglutarate to begin the shunt and succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (26) concludes the shunt by the formation of succinate. Recently, work by
Busch and Fromm (1999) has identified that an Arabidopsis succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase was localized in mitochondria. Previously, they had identified a Glu decarboxylase in the cytosol (Snedden et al.,
1996 ), but have not found evidence of GABA aminotransferase gene(s),
which are likely to code for mitochondrial protein(s), for the
completion of this putative shunt (Busch and Fromm, 1999 ). Several
aminotransferases were identified in this study (154 and 111) and have
been annotated based on average homology to transferases with known
substrates. A range of other aminotransferases with some homology to
GABA and -Ala aminotransferases are also present in Arabidopsis
protein DBs, and several have predicted mitochondrial presequences. Any
of these proteins may act as a GABA aminotransferase to complete this stunt.
RNA Metabolism and Translation Apparatus
Proteins involved in mitochondrial RNA metabolism were also found
in the Arabidopsis mitochondrial proteome. Among these, a DEAD box RNA
helicase (163) was identified. A different protein of this family
(AtSUV3) has recently been characterized in Arabidopsis mitochondria
(Gagliardi et al., 1999 ). The function of such proteins in plant
mitochondria remain unclear, but they are predicted to be involved in
transcript unfolding during, for example, transcript maturation or
degradation processes. In yeast, a homologous helicase, SUV3, is a
component of the mitochondrial 3'- to 5'-RNA degradosome (Margossian et
al., 1996 ). The presence of at least two proteins of this family in
plant mitochondria might suggest that different helicases could be
transcript specific, or alternatively, that they could be mechanism
specific. For example, one could be involved in degradation and another
in transcript maturation. Another protein showing a typical Gly-rich
domain, which is characteristic of RNA-binding proteins, was also
identified (2). This protein might be a component of the mitochondrial
ribosome; it shows high similarity (data not shown) to the Arabidopsis
mitochondrial ribosomal protein rps19 (Sanchez et al.,
1996 ). Several members of the plant mitochondrial translational
apparatus, the elongation factors Tu, G, and TS, were also found in
this analysis (47, 94, 168, 102, 103, and 145). The mitochondrial EF-Tu
protein has been characterized for Arabidopsis (Kuhlman and Palmer,
1995 ) and recently for maize (Choi et al., 2000 ). However, the putative
functions of Q9SHD6 and O82505 as elongation factors G and TS are only
based on homology to yeast mitochondrial proteins (Vambutas et al.,
1991 ).
Comparisons of Targeting Prediction Programs Using Proteome
Data
All the identified protein sequences were queried through three
intracellular targeting prediction program: TargetP, Psort, and
MitoProt. TargetP and Psort assess a number of potential targeting destinations. They identified 54 and 49 protein sequences,
respectively, as mitochondrial targeted based on their N-terminal
region (Table II). In this analysis, TargetP was used in its
winner-takes-all mode without setting a specificity cut-off for
targeting. MitoProt only predicts the likelihood of targeting to the
mitochondria based on the probability that a presented sequence belongs
to the group of known presequences based on 47 weighted
characteristics. MitoProt identified 53 proteins as putatively
mitochondrial based on a probability cut-off of >0.85. Notably, all
three prediction programs only agreed on a subset of 32 of these
protein sequences as being likely targeted to mitochondria. TargetP and
Psort identified 16 and 13 sequences, respectively, as chloroplast
targeted, agreeing on only nine of this set. The disputed sequences in
most cases were assessed as mitochondrial by the other prediction
program. This set included a range of well-known mitochondrial proteins such as subunits of succinly CoA ligase (3), pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (132), cytochrome c oxidase (151), and the
mitochondrial elongation factor Tu (47, 94, and 168). A remaining 20 to
30 proteins sequence, depending on the program, were not considered to
contain mitochondrial targeting sequences by the three prediction
programs. This set of protein sequences included two
aconitase protein sequences, the four prohibitin protein sequences, the
two porin sequences, the TOM40 import pore protein sequence, and the
adenylate kinase protein sequence. All these proteins are known to be
mitochondrial, but their location (predominantly but not exclusively in
the outer membrane and intermembrane space) does not require classical
import by cleavable N-terminal extensions. Of the 10 proteins of
unknown function identified in this study, a total of six contained
putative N-terminal targeting sequences. The remaining four (125, 143, 78, and 124) do not contain clearly identifiable targeting sequences; however, as we have seen above, this may not preclude their
mitochondrial localization.
GRAVY Scores, Protein Solubility, and Membrane
Localization
A GRAVY score is a single value indication of the overall
hydropathicity of a protein sequence based on the Kyte and Doolittle algorithms the more positive the score the more hydrophobic the overall sequence (Kyte and Doolittle, 1982 ). The addition of thiourea as a chaotropic agent, the advent of new nonionic sulfobetaine detergents, and the use of the noncharged reductant tributylphosphine have all be credited with allowing more hydrophobic proteins to enter
two-dimensional gels for separated and analysis (Chevallet et al.,
1998 ; Herbert et al., 1998 ; Rabilloud, 1998 ). To date, proteins with
GRAVY scores of approximately +0.25 to +0.30 are considered to
represent the limit of these two-dimensional gel solubility
improvements (Herbert, 1999 ). Our analysis has revealed several
proteins with positive GRAVY scores of 0.000 to +0.165; however, these
are unlikely proteins to be considered "highly hydrophobic." They
include malate dehydrogenase (56 and 202), the -subunit of succinyl
CoA ligase (3), and the ATP-dependent protease (65), which were
designated in the soluble protein sample in Figure 2, as well as a
peripheral membrane protein (26) and two unassigned proteins (130 and
144). The integral membrane proteins identified such as porin (57, 96, 14, and 128), prohibitins (13, 156, 166, and 169), and processing
peptidases (25, 24, and 17) did not have positive GRAVY scores. Our DMA
localization study (Fig. 2; Table II) showed that many of the major
proteins shown to be soluble were subunits of the TCA cycle and the
major HSPs of the 60 and 70 classes. The subunits of the
F1Fo ATP synthase were all
in the peripheral membrane class (Table II). So overall, although the
localization of the identified proteins as soluble, peripheral
membrane, or integral membrane are largely in agreement with
expectation, the GRAVY scores do not correlate well with these DMA localizations.
 |
DISCUSSION |
A number of reports have presented two-dimensional gel arrays of
mitochondria protein profiles from pea (Humphery-Smith et al., 1992 ),
potato (Solanum tuberosum; Colas des Francs-Small et al.,
1992 ), Arabidopsis (Davy de Virville et al., 1998 ), and maize (Dunbar
et al., 1997 ). Most of these reports have highlighted changes that
occur in this profile in different tissues from the same plant or
during developmental changes within the same cell type. However,
identifications of the different protein spots in these profiles have
been limited by the need for cross-reacting antibodies or sufficient
material and finance for N-terminal sequencing. The result has been a
rather limited understanding of many of the major proteins that are
found in the mitochondrial profile. Recently, Prime et al. (2000)
identified six mitochondrial membrane-associated proteins in their
Arabidopsis organelle membrane preparations using a combination of
Edman degradation and MS/MS-based sequencing. Here, we show that the
availability of full Arabidopsis genome sequence now enables the use of
less expensive, high-throughput identifications of even very low
abundance plant proteins from two-dimensional gel profiles by peptide
mass fingerprinting using MALDI-ToF MS data. This opens the way for
full subproteome analyses in plants. We have used a cell suspension
culture in our experiments, which has the advantages of lower cell
heterogeneity, higher cytoplasmic contents, and greater mass yields
than a whole plant Arabidopsis system. However, extension of this
research into whole plants and into specific differentiated plant
organs has the potential to identify other proteins associated with
metabolic pathways not evident in cell culture.
Identifying Functions in Plant Mitochondria
Based on the identifications we have obtained, our attempts to
minimize contamination of our mitochondrial samples from plastid and
peroxisomal material has been largely successful (Fig. 1). We have not
identified any photosystem proteins, components of the Calvin cycle, or
major peroxisomal proteins (Table II). By analysis of the major
proteins of Arabidopsis mitochondria, we have begun to gain a more
global appreciation of which proteins are present and thus which
metabolic operations are possible in plant mitochondria. This analysis
also provides insight into the relative abundance of different proteins
that may provide the framework for determining turnover rates of
different enzymes and the putative maximal fluxes of metabolic
pathways. It is clear that from the results presented, the TCA cycle,
the electron transport chain, and HSP60/HSP70s dominate the list of
identifications (Table II) and the highly abundant proteins visualized
on the two-dimensional gel profile (Fig. 3). The studies of these
components in the plant mitochondrial research literature are
significant, no doubt aided by this abundance and the extensive
knowledge of these metabolic processes from mammals. Relatively little
work has focused on the amino acid catabolism by plant mitochondria
that is highlighted by the identifications in Table II. In addition, we
know little about the potential presence of a GABA shunt, the
possibility of P450 reactions, or the role of the different classes of
chaperonins in plant mitochondria (Table II). Furthermore, more
extensive investigations will be required to identify the status and
importance of the unknown function proteins identified in this study.
A variety of mitochondrial proteins that are known to be present in
significant abundance were not observed in this study. These include
nearly all of the proteins encoded in the mitochondrial genome and a
range of inner membrane carriers. In both of these cases, the
hydrophobicity and basic nature of the protein sequences place them
outside the resolving ability of current two-dimensional electrophoresis. The complex I, ATP synthase, cytochrome
b/c1 complex, and cytochrome oxidase subunits
encoded in the mitochondrial genome have GRAVY scores greater than +0.3
in almost every case, and the ribosomal proteins in the mitochondrial
genome are more soluble in nature but have pI values of 10.4 to 11.3. The inner membrane carriers have pI values in excess of 9.5 and are
also hydrophobic containing six transmembrane domains.
Peptide Mass Fingerprinting in Arabidopsis
Starting with a total of 170 spectra, we had 155 high-quality
spectra for DB searching. A total of 91 spectra were matched to 77 different predicted protein sequences, providing a percentage hit rate
of 59%. In the set of 77 protein sequences, only 11% were unknown
proteins based on sequence comparison searches. In yeast and bacterial
systems, peptide mass fingerprinting has yielded an approximately 90%
hit rate (Shevchenko et al., 1996 ), and 30% to 40% of open reading
frames (ORFs) identified by genomic sequencing are assigned as unknown
function by sequence comparisons (The Arabidopsis Genome Initiative,
2000 ). Although our data are only preliminary, an explanation of what
lies behind these statistics seen in this Arabidopsis study is required
to further our analysis of the mitochondrial proteome of plants.
The inability to match 40% of spectra to predicted ORFs is
likely to be due to at least two factors. First, post-translational modifications to proteins will alter the apparent masses of peptides and preclude matching to DB entries. The presence of such modifications is evident from the differences in apparent molecular mass and pI that
were recorded for protein spots that were matched to the same gene
product (Table II). Such modifications can be recognized by MS/MS-based
analysis of peptide sequences, and sequence tag information afforded by
these MS technologies will help to identify heavily modified proteins
in the future. Second, matching to translated ORFs requires that
intron-exon boundaries have been accurately determined, are in frame,
and that all ORFs in the genomic sequence have been recognized.
Searches of redundant DBs of translated ORFs such as GENpept and TE
readily illustrate that intron-exon boundaries are not always
identified accurately in Arabidopsis sequences. This phenomenon
will be exacerbated in the case of unknown function proteins where
sequence alignments to characterized orthologs do not provide a ready
check of these splicing sites and frame shifts. This might explain the
low overall hit rate and the even lower hit rate on unknown function
translated ORFs in our data (Table II). A solution to this problem
would be searches of peptide mass data not only against predicted
translated ORFs, but also against six frame translations of the full
genomic sequence of Arabidopsis. This would not only improve peptide
mass fingerprinting searches, but will also act as a tool for the
improvement of Arabidopsis ORF identification and correct construction
from raw genomic sequence to supplement the use of expressed sequence
tag sequence.
Future Mitochondrial Proteome Prediction
If the plant mitochondrial proteome is defined as the native
proteins encoded on the mitochondrial genome and all the proteins encoded in the nucleus that could possibly be targeted to this organelle, then its elucidation is not a trivial matter. Comparison of
MitoProt, Psort, and TargetP suggests that no one program currently provides a complete, high confidence analysis of the nuclear encoded components of the plant mitochondrial proteome. The small use of
characterized plant mitochondrial proteins in the establishment of
these tools and the abundant evidence of mitochondrial targeting by
means other than N-terminal extensions do exacerbate these problems.
The experimental approach we have outlined here provides direct
evidence of proteins that are localized in mitochondria. However, this
experimental proteome is limited to those proteins that accumulate to
significant levels, that are expressed in the tissue sample used, and
that are able to remain soluble during sample handling and separation.
Further analysis of low-abundance proteins will also no doubt reveal
low levels of contamination of mitochondrial samples with other
cellular compartments. We are currently working toward reducing these
experimental limitations in a number of ways. The separation of
mitochondria into outer membrane, inner membrane, inter-membrane space,
and matrix compartments reduces the complexity and increases the amount
of low-abundance proteins. Comparison of the proteome across
developmental stages and following environmental stimuli will identify
proteins that are not found under the current cell growth regime.
Improvements in isoelectric focusing (IEF)/SDS-PAGE, the use of
blue-native-PAGE/SDS-PAGE, and the advent of non-gel based
chromatography for protein separation will also help to improve the
separation of hydrophobic proteins and further the experimentally
identifiable mitochondrial proteome, especially those components
encoded in the mitochondrial genome. As these experimental approaches
are explored, they will then provide the badly needed basic data for
the establishment of high confidence bioinformatic based detection of
the full mitochondrial proteome.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Maintenance of Cell Culture
A heterotrophic Arabidopsis cell culture, established from
callus of cv Erecta stem explants, has been maintained for over 9 years
by weekly subculture. Media used for this cell culture was Murashige
and Skoog basal media supplemented with 3% (w/v) Suc, 0.5 mg/L
naphthaleneacetic acid, and 0.05 mg/L kinetin (May and Leaver, 1993 ).
The cell cultures were maintained in the dark at 22°C in an orbital
shaker (150 rpm). At 6 to 7 d, each flask (120 mL) contained 8 to
10 g fresh weight of cells, and growth was approximately in the
middle of the log phase. Subculture of 20 mL of culture to 100 mL of
fresh media began the cycle again.
Mitochondrial Isolation
A total of 1.0 to 1.2 L of 7-d cell culture was filtered through
gauze to remove media and was then ground by mortar and pestle, 30 g at a time. Grinding of each 30-g aliquot was performed in 100 mL of
grinding medium (0.3 M mannitol, 50 mM sodium
pyrophosphate, 0.5% [w/v] bovine serum albumin [BSA], 0.5%
[w/v] polyvinylpyrrolidone-40, 2 mM EGTA, and 20 mM Cys, pH 8.0). Filtered cell extract was separated by
centrifugation at 1,000g for 5 min at 4°C and the
supernatant was centrifuged again at 18,000g for 15 min.
The resulted organelle pellet was washed by repeating the 1,000 and
18,000g centrifugation steps. The final organelle pellet
was resuspended in mannitol wash buffer (0.3 M mannitol,
0.1% [w/v]) BSA, and 10 mM TES
(N-tris[hydroxymethyl]methyl-2-aminoethanesulfonic acid]-NaOH, pH 7.5) and loaded onto a Percoll step gradient consisting of 1:4:2 ratio, bottom to top, of 40% Percoll:23% Percoll:18% Percoll in mannitol wash buffer. The gradients were centrifuged for 45 min at 40,000g, and mitochondria were present as an
opaque band at the 23%:40% interface. This band was aspirated,
concentrated, and washed by centrifugation at 15,000g
for 15 min and was then loaded onto a self-forming Percoll gradient
containing 28% Percoll in Suc wash buffer (0.3 M Suc,
0.1% [w/v] BSA, and 10 mM TES-NaOH, pH 7.5). After
centrifugation at 40,000g for 30 min, mitochondria banded near the top of the gradient and peroxisomal material banded near the bottom of the gradient. The mitochondrial band was aspirated and again washed and concentrated by two centrifugation steps at
15,000g for 15 min in mannitol wash buffer.
Purity Measurements
Fractions of 1 mL each were collected from top to bottom of the
Percoll step gradient and the Percoll self-forming gradient. The
activities of the following marker enzymes were measured in each
fraction: cytochrome c oxidase (mitochondrion), catalase (peroxisome), alkaline pyrophosphatase (plastid), and alcohol dehydrogenase (cytosol). Enzyme assays were as detailed in the following references: cytochrome c oxidase and catalase
(Neuberger, 1985 ), alkaline pyrophosphatase (Gross and ap Rees, 1986 ),
and alcohol dehydrogenase (Smith and ap Rees, 1979 ).
Respiratory Measurements
Oxygen consumption was measured in a Clark-type oxygen electrode
in 1 mL of reaction medium containing 0.3 M mannitol, 10 mM TES-KOH, pH 7.5, 5 mM
KH2PO4, 10 mM NaCl, 2 mM MgSO4, and 0.1% (w/v) BSA. Pyruvate (5 mM), malate (0.5 mM), succinate (10 mM), NADH (1 mM), ADP (0.5 mM), KCN
(0.5 mM), and nPG (0.05 mM) were added as
indicated to modulate oxygen consumption rates. Cytochrome c oxidase activity was measured as ascorbate (5 mM), cytochrome c (25 µM)-dependent oxygen consumption in the presence of
0.05% (w/v) Triton X-100. Outer membrane integrity was assayed as the latency of cytochrome c oxidase activity (Neuberger,
1985 ),
Fractionation of Mitochondria
Mitochondria proteins were fractionated into soluble, membrane,
integral membrane, and peripheral membrane samples. Approximately 10 mg
of mitochondrial protein was incubated in 1 mL of 20 mM TES
(pH 7.5), freeze-thawed in liquid nitrogen three times, and centrifuged
for 25 min at 20,000g. The supernatant represented soluble proteins. One-half of the pellet was retained as the total membrane fraction. The other one-half of the pellet was resuspended in
1 mL of 100 mM Na2CO3 (pH of
approximately 12), incubated for 20 min on ice, and again centrifuged
for 25 min at 20,000g (Fujiki et al., 1982 ). The pellet
was retained as integral membrane proteins, and the supernatant
contained the peripheral membrane proteins. Protein samples were
prepared for two-dimensional electrophoresis and loaded relative to the
amount of total mitochondrial protein from which each fraction was
derived to allow direct comparisons between whole mitochondrial samples
and the different fractions.
Two-Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis
Mitochondria protein samples (500 µg) were acetone-extracted
by the addition of acetone to a final concentration of 80% (v/v) at 80°C, samples were stored at 20°C for 4 h, and then
were then centrifuged at 20,000g for 15 min. The pellets
were resuspended in an IEF sample buffer consisting of 6 M
urea, 2 M thiourea, 2% (w/v) CHAPS
{3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]propanesulfonate}, 2%
(v/v) ampholytes (3-10), 2 mM tributylphosphine, and
0.001% (w/v) bromphenol blue. Aliquots of 330 µL were used to
re-swell dried 180-mm, pH 3 to 10 nonlinear immobilized pH
gradient strips (Immobiline DryStrips, Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech) overnight and then IEF was performed for 19.5 h, reaching
a total of 49 KVh at 20°C on a flat-bed electrophoresis unit
(Multiphor II, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Immobilized pH
gradient strips were then transferred to an equilibration buffer
consisting of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 6.8), 4 M
urea, 2% (w/v) SDS, 0.001% (w/v) bromphenol blue, and 100 mM mercaptoethanol and were incubated for 20 min with
rocking. The equilibrated strips were then slotted into central single wells of 4% (w/v) acrylamide stacking gels above 0.1 × 18.5 × 20 cm, 12% (w/v) acrylamide, 0.1% (w/v)
SDS-polyacrylamide gels. Strips were overlaid with 0.5% (w/v) agarose
in SDS-PAGE running buffer. Gel electrophoresis was performed at 25 mA
per gel with circulating cooling and was completed in 5 h.
Proteins were visualized by colloidal Coomassie (G250) staining.
Molecular weight and pI standards from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech were
used to confirm fixed pH gradient positioning on first dimension
separation and to identify apparent molecular masses on second
dimension separation.
MALDI-ToF MS for Peptide Fingerprint Analysis
The majority of the in-gel digestion and MS was performed as a
service by The Australian Proteome Analysis Facility (Sydney, Australia) using a Micromass ToFSpec 2E machine. Additional analyses were performed by the authors with the aid of Dr. Richard Lipscombe (The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia). Protein spots
of interest were excised from gels and placed in wells of a 96-titer
plate. Destain solution (50% [v/v] acetonitrile, 25 mM
NH4HCO3) was added (50 µL) to samples for 45 min, removed, and replenished once. Destained gel slices were dried at
50°C for 20 min and digested at 37°C in 10 µL of 25 mM NH4HCO3 containing 12.5 µg/mL
trypsin overnight. Acetonitrile (10 µL) containing 1% (v/v)
trifluoroacetic acid was added to each gel slice and incubated for 15 min. Supernatant aliquots of 1 µL were added directly to matrix
( -cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid [8 mg/mL], 50% [v/v]
acetonitrile, and 1% [v/v] trifluoroacetic acid) and air dried onto
a MALDI plate for MS analysis using an Voyager-DE Pro (Applied
Biosystems, Foster City, CA).
Identification of DB Entry Matches and Sequence
Analysis
MALDI-ToF MS analyses provided a set of 15 to 30 peptide
masses from each trypsinated protein sample. These masses were used, via MS-Fit-based software, to identify hits in translated GB, TE, and
SWISS-PROT libraries, as well as in the The Arabidopsis Information Resource-translated ORFs of Arabidopsis. Matching was
performed at ±50 ppm from the input masses and hits were assessed by peptide number matching (5-16), coverage (typically greater than 25%), and the Molecular Weight Search score. All data were then cross-matched by comparison of the predicted molecular weight and
pI of the predicted protein with the observed molecular
mass and pI of the excision site on two-dimensional gels. TargetP
(http://www.cbs. dtu.dk/services/TargetP/), MitoProt
(http://www.mips. biochem.mpg.de/cgi-bin/proj/medgen/mitofilter), and Psort (http://psort.nibb.ac.jp/) predictions, and GRAVY scores were
determined using full-length predicted protein sequences. Molecular
mass, pI, and GRAVY scores were determined using the ProtParam program
on an ExPASy website (http://au.expasy.org).
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This research has been facilitated by access to the Australian
Proteome Analysis Facility established under the Australian Government's Major National Research Facilities Program. We
acknowledge the kind help of Dr. Richard Lipscombe with MALDI-ToF analysis.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received April 23, 2001; returned for revision May 31, 2001; accepted August 20, 2001.
1
A.H.M. was supported by an Australian Research
Council Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship. This work was also
supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
(to C.J.L.) and by the University of Western Australia Small Grants Scheme (to A.H.M.).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail hmillar{at}cyllene.uwa.edu.au; fax
61-8-9380-1148.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.010387.
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Plant Cell Physiol.,
October 15, 2003;
44(10):
1002 - 1012.
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L. Wen, K. L. Ruesch, V. M. Ortega, T. L. Kamps, S. Gabay-Laughnan, and C. D. Chase
A Nuclear restorer-of-fertility Mutation Disrupts Accumulation of Mitochondrial ATP Synthase Subunit {alpha} in Developing Pollen of S Male-Sterile Maize
Genetics,
October 1, 2003;
165(2):
771 - 779.
[Abstract]
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S. M. Gomez, K. Y. Bil', R. Aguilera, J. N. Nishio, K. F. Faull, and J. P. Whitelegge
Transit Peptide Cleavage Sites of Integral Thylakoid Membrane Proteins
Mol. Cell. Proteomics,
October 1, 2003;
2(10):
1068 - 1085.
[Abstract]
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A. H. Millar, V. Mittova, G. Kiddle, J. L. Heazlewood, C. G. Bartoli, F. L. Theodoulou, and C. H. Foyer
Control of Ascorbate Synthesis by Respiration and Its Implications for Stress Responses
Plant Physiology,
October 1, 2003;
133(2):
443 - 447.
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A. M. Michalecka, A. S. Svensson, F. I. Johansson, S. C. Agius, U. Johanson, A. Brennicke, S. Binder, and A. G. Rasmusson
Arabidopsis Genes Encoding Mitochondrial Type II NAD(P)H Dehydrogenases Have Different Evolutionary Origin and Show Distinct Responses to Light
Plant Physiology,
October 1, 2003;
133(2):
642 - 652.
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P. Giege, J. L. Heazlewood, U. Roessner-Tunali, A. H. Millar, A. R. Fernie, C. J. Leaver, and L. J. Sweetlove
Enzymes of Glycolysis Are Functionally Associated with the Mitochondrion in Arabidopsis Cells
PLANT CELL,
September 1, 2003;
15(9):
2140 - 2151.
[Abstract]
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A. Takahashi, T. Kawasaki, H. L. Wong, U. Suharsono, H. Hirano, and K. Shimamoto
Hyperphosphorylation of a Mitochondrial Protein, Prohibitin, Is Induced by Calyculin A in a Rice Lesion-Mimic Mutant cdr1
Plant Physiology,
August 1, 2003;
132(4):
1861 - 1869.
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A. Elo, A. Lyznik, D. O. Gonzalez, S. D. Kachman, and S. A. Mackenzie
Nuclear Genes That Encode Mitochondrial Proteins for DNA and RNA Metabolism Are Clustered in the Arabidopsis Genome
PLANT CELL,
July 1, 2003;
15(7):
1619 - 1631.
[Abstract]
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A. Picciocchi, R. Douce, and C. Alban
The Plant Biotin Synthase Reaction: IDENTIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF ESSENTIAL MITOCHONDRIAL ACCESSORY PROTEIN COMPONENTS
J. Biol. Chem.,
June 27, 2003;
278(27):
24966 - 24975.
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P. V. Minorsky
Plant Physiology,
June 1, 2003;
132(2):
726 - 727.
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M. Ferro, D. Salvi, S. Brugiere, S. Miras, S. Kowalski, M. Louwagie, J. Garin, J. Joyard, and N. Rolland
Proteomics of the chloroplast envelope membranes from Arabidopsis thaliana.
Mol. Cell. Proteomics,
May 1, 2003;
2(5):
325 - 345.
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J. L. Heazlewood, K. A. Howell, J. Whelan, and A. H. Millar
Towards an Analysis of the Rice Mitochondrial Proteome
Plant Physiology,
May 1, 2003;
132(1):
230 - 242.
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R. van Lis, A. Atteia, G. Mendoza-Hernandez, and D. Gonzalez-Halphen
Identification of Novel Mitochondrial Protein Components of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. A Proteomic Approach
Plant Physiology,
May 1, 2003;
132(1):
318 - 330.
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B. S. Watson, V. S. Asirvatham, L. Wang, and L. W. Sumner
Mapping the Proteome of Barrel Medic (Medicago truncatula)
Plant Physiology,
March 1, 2003;
131(3):
1104 - 1123.
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D. E. Goggin, R. Lipscombe, E. Fedorova, A. H. Millar, A. Mann, C. A. Atkins, and P. M. C. Smith
Dual Intracellular Localization and Targeting of Aminoimidazole Ribonucleotide Synthetase in Cowpea
Plant Physiology,
March 1, 2003;
131(3):
1033 - 1041.
[Abstract]
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A. H. Millar and J. L. Heazlewood
Genomic and Proteomic Analysis of Mitochondrial Carrier Proteins in Arabidopsis
Plant Physiology,
February 1, 2003;
131(2):
443 - 453.
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N. L. Taylor, D. A. Day, and A. H. Millar
Environmental Stress Causes Oxidative Damage to Plant Mitochondria Leading to Inhibition of Glycine Decarboxylase
J. Biol. Chem.,
November 1, 2002;
277(45):
42663 - 42668.
[Abstract]
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A. Stahl, P. Moberg, J. Ytterberg, O. Panfilov, H. Brockenhuus von Lowenhielm, F. Nilsson, and E. Glaser
Isolation and Identification of a Novel Mitochondrial Metalloprotease (PreP) That Degrades Targeting Presequences in Plants
J. Biol. Chem.,
October 25, 2002;
277(44):
41931 - 41939.
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Y. Fukao, M. Hayashi, and M. Nishimura
Proteomic Analysis of Leaf Peroxisomal Proteins in Greening Cotyledons of Arabidopsis thaliana
Plant Cell Physiol.,
July 15, 2002;
43(7):
689 - 696.
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C. Finnie, S. Melchior, P. Roepstorff, and B. Svensson
Proteome Analysis of Grain Filling and Seed Maturation in Barley
Plant Physiology,
July 1, 2002;
129(3):
1308 - 1319.
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