Published November 7, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Reduced mitochondria provide an essential function for the cytosolic methionine cycle

Description

The loss of mitochondria in oxymonad protists has been associated with the redirection of the essential Fe-S cluster assembly to the cytosol. Yet as our knowledge of diverse free-living protists broadens, the list of functions of their mitochondrial-related organelles (MROs) expands. We revealed another such function in the closest oxymonad relative, Paratrimastix pyriformis, after we solved the proteome of its MRO with high accuracy, using localization of organelle proteins by isotope tagging (LOPIT). The newly assigned enzymes connect to the glycine cleavage system (GCS) and produce folate derivatives with one-carbon units and formate. These are likely to be used by the cytosolic methionine cycle involved in S-adenosyl methionine recycling. The data provide consistency with the presence of the GCS in MROs of free-living species and its absence in most endobionts, which typically lose the methionine cycle and, in the case of oxymonads, the mitochondria.

Notes

Funded under Horizon2020. Citation: Zítek et al., Reduced mitochondria provide an essential function for the cytosolic methionine cycle, Current Biology (2022), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.10.028

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Funding

Amitochondriates – Life without mitochondrion 771592
European Commission