Mitochondrial processing peptidases are heterodimeric enzymes (α/βMPP) that play an essential role in mitochondrial biogenesis by recognizing and cleaving the targeting presequences of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins. The two subunits are paralogues that probably evolved by duplication of a gene for a monomeric metallopeptidase from the endosymbiotic ancestor of mitochondria. Here, we characterize the MPP-like proteins from two important human parasites that contain highly reduced versions of mitochondria, the mitosomes of Giardia intestinalis and the hydrogenosomes of Trichomonas vaginalis. Our biochemical characterization of recombinant proteins showed that, contrary to a recent report, the Trichomonas processing peptidase functions efficiently as an α/β heterodimer. By contrast, and so far uniquely among eukaryotes, the Giardia processing peptidase functions as a monomer comprising a single βMPP-like catalytic subunit. The structure and surface charge distribution of the Giardia processing peptidase predicted from a 3-D protein model appear to have co-evolved with the properties of Giardia mitosomal targeting sequences, which, unlike classic mitochondrial targeting signals, are typically short and impoverished in positively charged residues. The majority of hydrogenosomal presequences resemble those of mitosomes, but longer, positively charged mitochondrial-type presequences were also identified, consistent with the retention of the Trichomonas αMPP-like subunit. Our computational and experimental/functional analyses reveal that the divergent processing peptidases of Giardia mitosomes and Trichomonas hydrogenosomes evolved from the same ancestral heterodimeric α/βMPP metallopeptidase as did the classic mitochondrial enzyme. The unique monomeric structure of the Giardia enzyme, and the co-evolving properties of the Giardia enzyme and substrate, provide a compelling example of the power of reductive evolution to shape parasite biology.
References
[1]
Embley TM, Martin W (2006) Eukaryotic evolution, changes and challenges. Nature 440: 623–630.
Neupert W, Herrmann JM (2007) Translocation of proteins into mitochondria. Annu Rev Biochem 76: 723–749.
[4]
Yaffe MP, Ohta S, Schatz G (1985) A yeast mutant temperature-sensitive for mitochondrial assembly is deficient in a mitochondrial protease activity that cleaves imported precursor polypeptides. EMBO J 4: 2069–2074.
[5]
Mukhopadhyay A, Yang CS, Wei B, Weiner H (2007) Precursor protein is readily degraded in mitochondrial matrix space if the leader is not processed by mitochondrial processing peptidase. J Biol Chem 282: 37266–37275.
[6]
Gakh O, Cavadini P, Isaya G (2002) Mitochondrial processing peptidases. Biochim Biophys Acta 1592: 63–77.
[7]
Nagao Y, Kitada S, Kojima K, Toh H, Kuhara S, et al. (2000) Glycine-rich region of mitochondrial processing peptidase alpha-subunit is essential for binding and cleavage of the precursor proteins. J Biol Chem 275: 34552–34556.
[8]
Arretz M, Schneider H, Guiard B, Brunner M, Neupert W (1994) Characterization of the mitochondrial processing peptidase of Neurospora crassa. J Biol Chem 269: 4959–4967.
[9]
Kitada S, Yamasaki E, Kojima K, Ito A (2003) Determination of the cleavage site of the presequence by mitochondrial processing peptidase on the substrate binding scaffold and the multiple subsites inside a molecular cavity. J Biol Chem 278: 1879–1885.
[10]
Taylor AB, Smith BS, Kitada S, Kojima K, Miyaura H, et al. (2001) Crystal structures of mitochondrial processing peptidase reveal the mode for specific cleavage of import signal sequences. Structure 9: 615–625.
[11]
Bradley PJ, Lahti CJ, Plümper E, Johnson PJ (1997) Targeting and translocation of proteins into the hydrogenosome of the protist Trichomonas: similarities with mitochondrial protein import. EMBO J 16: 3484–3493.
[12]
Tovar J, León-Avila G, Sánchez LB, ?u?ák R, Tachezy J, et al. (2003) Mitochondrial remnant organelles of Giardia function in iron-sulphur protein maturation. Nature 426: 172–176.
[13]
Morrison HG, McArthur AG, Gillin FD, Aley SB, Adam RD, et al. (2007) Genomic minimalism in the early diverging intestinal parasite Giardia lamblia. Science 317: 1921–1926.
[14]
Dole?al P, ?míd O, Rada P, Zubá?ová Z, Bursac D, et al. (2005) Giardia mitosomes and trichomonad hydrogenosomes share a common mode of protein targeting. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102: 10924–10929.
[15]
Brown MT, Goldstone HM, Bastida-Corcuera F, Delgadillo-Correa MG, McArthur AG, et al. (2007) A functionally divergent hydrogenosomal peptidase with protomitochondrial ancestry. Mol Microbiol 64: 1154–1163.
[16]
Kitada S, Uchiyama T, Funatsu T, Kitada Y, Ogishima T, et al. (2007) A protein from a parasitic microorganism, Rickettsia prowazekii, can cleave the signal sequences of proteins targeting mitochondria. J Bacteriol 189: 844–850.
Janata J, Holá K, Kubala M, Gakh O, Parkhomenko N, et al. (2004) Substrate evokes translocation of both domains in the mitochondrial processing peptidase alpha-subunit during which the C-terminus acts as a stabilizing element. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 316: 211–217.
[19]
Kojima K, Kitada S, Ogishima T, Ito A (2001) A proposed common structure of substrates bound to mitochondrial processing peptidase. J Biol Chem 276: 2115–2121.
[20]
Dyall SD, Brown MT, Johnson PJ (2004) Ancient invasions: from endosymbionts to organelles. Science 304: 253–257.
[21]
Dole?al P, Likic V, Tachezy J, Lithgow T (2006) Evolution of the molecular machines for protein import into mitochondria. Science 313: 314–318.
[22]
Carlton JM, Hirt RP, Silva JC, Delcher AL, Schatz M, et al. (2007) Draft genome sequence of the sexually transmitted pathogen Trichomonas vaginalis. Science 315: 207–212.
[23]
Edgar RC (2004) MUSCLE: multiple sequence alignment with high accuracy and high throughput. Nucleic Acids Res 32: 1792–1797.
[24]
Talavera G, Castresana J (2007) Improvement of phylogenies after removing divergent and ambiguously aligned blocks from protein sequence alignments. Syst Biol 56: 564–577.
[25]
Abascal F, Zardoya R, Posada D (2005) ProtTest: selection of best-fit models of protein evolution. Bioinformatics 21: 2104–2105.
[26]
Lewis PO, Holder MT, Holsinger KE (2005) Polytomies and Bayesian phylogenetic inference. Syst Biol 54: 241–253.
[27]
Beiko RG, Keith JM, Harlow TJ, Ragan MA (2006) Searching for convergence in phylogenetic Markov chain Monte Carlo. Syst Biol 55: 553–565.
[28]
Bollback JP (2002) Bayesian model adequacy and choice in phylogenetics. Mol Biol Evol 19: 1171–1180.
[29]
Sali A, Blundell TL (1993) Comparative protein modelling by satisfaction of spatial restraints. J Mol Biol 234: 779–815.
[30]
Do CB, Mahabhashyam MS, Brudno M, Batzoglou S (2005) ProbCons: Probabilistic consistency-based multiple sequence alignment. Genome Res 15: 330–340.
[31]
Laskowski RA, Moss DS, Thornton JM (1993) Main-chain bond lengths and bond angles in protein structures. J Mol Biol 231: 1049–1067.
[32]
Rodriguez R, Chinea G, Lopez N, Pons T, Vriend G (1998) Homology modeling, model and software evaluation: three related resources. Bioinformatics 14: 523–528.
[33]
Baker NA, Sept D, Joseph S, Holst MJ, McCammon JA (2001) Electrostatics of nanosystems: application to microtubules and the ribosome. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98: 10037–10041.
[34]
Laskowski RA, McArthur MW, Moss DS, Thornton JM (1993) PROCHECK: a program to check the stereochemical quality of protein structures. J Appl Cryst 26: 283–291.
[35]
Bryson K, McGuffin LJ, Marsden RL, Ward JJ, Sodhi JS, et al. (2005) Protein structure prediction servers at University College London. Nucl Acids Res 33: W36–38.