Submitted on April 5, 2006
Revised on August 11, 2006
Accepted on August 17, 2006
Differential analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria by free-flow electrophoresis
Hans Zischka, Ralf J. Braun, Enrico P. Marantidis, Dietmute Büringer, Carsten Bornhövd, Stefanie M. Hauck, Oliver Demmer, Christian J. Gloeckner, Andreas S. Reichert, Frank Madeo, and Marius Ueffing
Institute of Toxicology, GSF-National Research Center for Environment and Health, Munich-Neuherberg, Bavaria 85764
Corresponding Author: zischka{at}gsf.de
One major problem concerning the analysis of mitochondria is the heterogeneity of mitochondrial appearance, especially under pathological conditions. We show here the use of zone-electrophoresis in a free-flow device (ZE-FFE) as an analytical sensor to discriminate between different yeast mitochondrial populations. Impairment of the organelles structural properties by hyper-osmotic stress resulted in broad separation profiles. Conversely, untreated mitochondria gave rise to homogeneous populations reflected by sharp separation profiles. Yeast mitochondria with altered respiratory activity, accompanied by a different outer membrane proteome composition, could be discriminated based on electrophoretic deflection. Proteolysis of the mitochondrial surface proteome and the deletion of a single major protein species of the mitochondrial outer membrane altered the ZE-FFE deflection of these organelles. In order to demonstrate the usefulness of ZE-FFE for the analysis of mitochondria associated with pathological processes, we analyzed mitochondrial fractions from an apoptotic yeast strain. The cdc48S565G strain carries a mutation in the CDC48 gene that is an essential participant in the ER-associated protein degradation pathway. Mutant cells accumulate polyubiquitinated proteins in microsomal and mitochondrial extracts. Subsequent ZE-FFE characterization could distinguish a mitochondrial subfraction specifically enriched with polyubiquitinated proteins from the majority of non-affected mitochondria. This result demonstrates that ZE-FFE may give important information on the specific properties of subpopulations of a mitochondrial preparation allowing a further detailed functional analysis.