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Lithocholic bile acid accumulated in yeast mitochondria orchestrates a development of an antiaging cellular pattern by causing age-related changes in cellular proteome a

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Adam Beach , Vincent R Richard , Simon Bourque , Tatiana Boukh-Viner , Pavlo Kyryakov , a

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Alejandra Gomez-Perez , Anthony Arlia-Ciommo , Rachel Feldman , Anna Leonov , Amanda a

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Piano , Veronika Svistkova & Vladimir I Titorenko a

Department of Biology; Concordia University; Montreal, QC, Canada Accepted author version posted online: 03 Apr 2015.

Click for updates To cite this article: Adam Beach, Vincent R Richard, Simon Bourque, Tatiana Boukh-Viner, Pavlo Kyryakov, Alejandra GomezPerez, Anthony Arlia-Ciommo, Rachel Feldman, Anna Leonov, Amanda Piano, Veronika Svistkova & Vladimir I Titorenko (2015) Lithocholic bile acid accumulated in yeast mitochondria orchestrates a development of an anti-aging cellular pattern by causing age-related changes in cellular proteome, Cell Cycle, 14:11, 1643-1656, DOI: 10.1080/15384101.2015.1026493 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15384101.2015.1026493

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REPORT Cell Cycle 14:11, 1643--1656; June 1, 2015; © 2015 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

Lithocholic bile acid accumulated in yeast mitochondria orchestrates a development of an anti-aging cellular pattern by causing age-related changes in cellular proteome Adam Beach, Vincent R Richard, Simon Bourque, Tatiana Boukh-Viner, Pavlo Kyryakov, Alejandra Gomez-Perez, Anthony Arlia-Ciommo, Rachel Feldman, Anna Leonov, Amanda Piano, Veronika Svistkova, and Vladimir I Titorenko* Department of Biology; Concordia University; Montreal, QC Canada

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Keywords: anti-aging compounds, cell metabolism, cellular aging, lithocholic bile acid, longevity, mitochondria, mitochondrial proteome, mitochondrial signaling, signal transduction, yeast Abbreviations: D, diauxic growth phase; DMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; ETC, electron transport chain; ISC, iron-sulfur clusters; LCA, lithocholic acid; MAM, mitochondria-associated membrane; OS, oxidative stress; PD, post-diauxic growth phase; PMD, partial mitochondrial dysfunction; ROS, reactive oxygen species; ST, stationary growth phase; TCA, tricarboxylic acid; WT, wild type.

We have previously revealed that exogenously added lithocholic bile acid (LCA) extends the chronological lifespan of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, accumulates in mitochondria and alters mitochondrial membrane lipidome. Here, we use quantitative mass spectrometry to show that LCA alters the age-related dynamics of changes in levels of many mitochondrial proteins, as well as numerous proteins in cellular locations outside of mitochondria. These proteins belong to 2 regulons, each modulated by a different mitochondrial dysfunction; we call them a partial mitochondrial dysfunction regulon and an oxidative stress regulon. We found that proteins constituting these regulons (1) can be divided into several “clusters”, each of which denotes a distinct type of partial mitochondrial dysfunction that elicits a different signaling pathway mediated by a discrete set of transcription factors; (2) exhibit 3 different patterns of the age-related dynamics of changes in their cellular levels; and (3) are encoded by genes whose expression is regulated by the transcription factors Rtg1p/Rtg2p/Rtg3p, Sfp1p, Aft1p, Yap1p, Msn2p/Msn4p, Skn7p and Hog1p, each of which is essential for longevity extension by LCA. Our findings suggest that LCA-driven changes in mitochondrial lipidome alter mitochondrial proteome and functionality, thereby enabling mitochondria to operate as signaling organelles that orchestrate an establishment of an anti-aging transcriptional program for many longevity-defining nuclear genes. Based on these findings, we propose a model for how such LCA-driven changes early and late in life of chronologically aging yeast cause a stepwise development of an anti-aging cellular pattern and its maintenance throughout lifespan.

Introduction The composition, morphology and functional state of mitochondria have been implicated in cell growth, division, differentiation, homeostasis, metabolism, stress response, signaling, immune response, aging, survival and death in evolutionarily distant eukaryotes; these cellular organelles are therefore central to the physiology, health and disease of eukaryotic organisms across phyla.1–7 Mitochondria are indispensable for many vital cellular processes, including the following: (1) the synthesis of most cellular ATP via oxidative phosphorylation coupled to the electron transfer chain (ETC) in the inner mitochondrial membrane;2,3 (2) the generation of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle

intermediates, some of which are used for the synthesis of amino acids, lipids and heme in mitochondria;3-5 (3) the maintenance of a metabolic status-specific NADC/NADH ratio, AMP/ATP ratio, level of acetyl-CoA and level of S-Adenosylmethionine; these mitochondria-derived metabolites modulate activities of several protein sensors governing energy-producing cellular metabolism and are also used for acetylation and methylation of numerous non-mitochondrial proteins involved in many cellular processes;3,57,8 (4) the synthesis and assembly of iron-sulfur clusters (ISC), inorganic cofactors of many mitochondrial, nuclear and cytosolic proteins playing essential roles in vital cellular processes;9 (5) the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS); these by-products of mitochondrial respiration play critical roles in

*Correspondence to: Vladimir I Titorenko; Email: [email protected] Submitted: 12/31/2014; Revised: 02/18/2015; Accepted: 02/28/2015 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15384101.2015.1026493

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regulating cell proliferation, differentiation, metabolism, signaling, immune response, aging, survival and death;4,5,10-14 (6) the proteolytic degradation of unfolded proteins accumulated in mitochondria above a toxic threshold; the efflux of the resulting peptides from the mitochondria elicits a specific transcriptional response in the nucleus, thus reducing the number of unfolded proteins in mitochondria below the toxic threshold;4,14-17 (7) the efflux of cytochrome c and other pro-apoptotic proteins from mitochondria to initiate a programmed form of apoptotic cell death as well as to modulate various non-apoptotic cellular processes, including cell cycle progression, differentiation, metabolism, autophagy, inflammation, immunity and regulated necrotic death;1-3,7,18-20 (8) the assembly and disassembly of various multi-protein complexes on the outer mitochondrial surface; these dynamic multi-protein complexes have been implicated in cell differentiation, signaling, metabolism, immune response, hypoxic response and death, as well as in mitochondrial fusion, fission, motility, inheritance, DNA maintenance and autophagic degradation;1,3,6,20,21-27 (9) the establishment of zones of close apposition between the outer mitochondrial membrane and the mitochondria-associated membrane (MAM) domains of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), plasma membrane, peroxisomes, vacuoles and autophagosomes; the MAM domains have been implicated in maintaining the homeostasis of intracellular Ca2C, sustaining membrane phospholipid homeostasis, controlling mitochondrial biogenesis and morphology, regulating mitochondrial division and movement, controlling ER stress, influencing ROS and ATP production, orchestrating autophagosome biogenesis during non-selective and mitochondria-selective forms of autophagy, impinging on immune signaling and inflammation, and defining cell susceptibility to a programmed form of apoptotic death;3,6,20,25,28–33 and (10) the communication of mitochondria with lysosomes and peroxisomes via small mitochondria-derived vesicles, which contribute to mitochondrial quality control and peroxisome biogenesis (respectively).34,35 All these findings support the view that mitochondria operate as signaling organelles that are intimately integrated with other cellular compartments in orchestrating many vital processes within eukaryotic cells.3,6,20,25,31,33 A challenge is to uncover molecular mechanisms through which certain changes in the molecular composition of mitochondria influence their role as a signaling compartment that integrates cellular responses to various physiological conditions. Our recent demonstration that exogenously added lithocholic bile acid (LCA) extends yeast chronological lifespan, accumulates in mitochondria and alters mitochondrial membrane lipidome36 provided us with an opportunity to explore how LCA-driven, longevity-extending changes in the composition of mitochondrial membrane phospholipids impact the ability of mitochondria to function as signaling organelles in aging. As a first step toward attaining our objective, in this study we used quantitative mass spectrometry to investigate the effect of LCA on the age-related dynamics of alterations in levels of mitochondrial proteins and proteins in cellular locations outside of mitochondria. Yeast cells for these experiments were cultured under caloric restriction (CR) conditions on 0.2% glucose rather than under non-CR conditions on 2% glucose. We chose

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CR conditions for the following reasons: (1) mitochondria, the organelles whose LCA-driven ability to operate as signaling compartments in yeast chronological aging we investigated in this study, are significantly more abundant and functionally active in yeast cells limited in calorie supply than they are in yeast cells on a high-calorie diet;37,38 (2) the longevity-extending efficacy of LCA accumulated in mitochondria of yeast cultured under CR conditions significantly exceeds that of yeast cultured under nonCR conditions;38 (3) LCA extends yeast chronological lifespan under CR conditions, under which such key pro-aging routes of longevity regulation as the target of rapamycin (TOR) and cAMP/protein kinase A (cAMP/PKA) signaling pathways are fully suppressed;38 and (4) LCA delays chronological aging in yeast by targeting 00 constitutive00 or 00 housekeeping00 longevity pathways; these pathways modulate longevity irrespective of the number of available calories and do not overlap with the 00 adaptable00 TOR and cAMP/PKA pathways that are under the stringent control of calorie availability.38

Results LCA elicits age-related changes in mitochondrial proteome We hypothesized that LCA accumulated in mitochondria of chronologically aging yeast may alter not only the membrane lipidome of these organelles36 but also their proteome. To test our hypothesis, we used quantitative mass spectrometry to compare proteins that were recovered in mitochondria purified from wildtype (WT) cells cultured in the presence of LCA or in its absence. We found that LCA alters the age-related dynamics of changes in levels of numerous mitochondrial proteins implicated in many essential mitochondrial functions (Fig. 1 and Table S1), including the following: (1) various enzymes of the TCA cycle;39 (2) Icl1p and Mls1p, enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle in mitochondria;40,41 (3) various protein components of the ETC;39 (4) Aat1p, Gdh3p, Ilv5p, Ilv6p and Lys12p, enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of several amino acids, including aspartate, asparagine, threonine, glycine, isoleucine, glutamate, leucine, valine and lysine;42,43 (5) the Cox10p, Cyc3p and Hem14p proteins implicated in heme synthesis and attachment;44,45 (6) the Grx5p protein involved in the synthesis and assembly of ISC, indispensable inorganic cofactors of various mitochondrial, nuclear and cytosolic proteins;9,46 (7) Pos5p, an enzyme catalyzing the synthesis of NADPH from NADH;47,48 (8) key protein components of reactive oxygen species (ROS) detoxification in mitochondria;39 (9) stress response proteins that have been implicated in mitochondrial protein import, folding and stress protection;39 (10) the Mia40p and Tim23p components of a machinery involved in protein import into the inner membrane, intermembrane space and matrix of mitochondria;44,49,50 (11) the Caf4p and Mdv1p protein components of mitochondrial fission machinery;1 (12) proteins that are essential for the synthesis, processing and translation of various mitochondrial RNA species;39 and (13) various mtDNA-binding proteins with essential roles in mitochondrial nucleoid replication, maintenance, protection from damage and inheritance.39

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Figure 1. LCA alters the age-related dynamics of changes in levels of numerous mitochondrial proteins implicated in many essential mitochondrial functions. Wild-type cells were cultured in the nutrient-rich YP medium initially containing 0.2% glucose, with 50 50 mM mu;M LCA or without it. Mitochondria were purified from cells recovered on days 2, 5 and 9 of culturing (D, PD and ST growth phases, respectively) as described in “Materials and Methods”. Mass spectrometry-based identification and quantitation of proteins recovered in purified mitochondria were performed as described in “Materials and Methods”. Relative levels of proteins in mitochondria of cells cultured in the presence of LCA (fold difference relative to those in the absence of LCA) are shown. Abbreviations: D, diauxic growth phase; ETC, the mitochondrial electron transport chain; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; PD, post-diauxic growth phase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; ST, stationary growth phase; TCA, the tricarboxylic acid cycle in mitochondria.

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With the help of the SPELL online search engine,51 we used each of these mitochondrial proteins as a query for analyzing extensive datasets of gene expression profiles in yeast mutants that lack (1) various transcription factors; (2) protein components of several signaling pathways known to be modulated by mitochondria; or (3) mitochondrial proteins shown to be essential for modulating these signaling pathways. Such bioinformatic analysis revealed that the mitochondrial proteins whose levels were altered in an age-related fashion in yeast cells cultured with LCA can be divided into 2 regulons, each modulated by a different kind of mitochondrial dysfunction. We call these 2 regulons a partial mitochondrial dysfunction (PMD) regulon and an oxidative stress (OS) regulon (Fig. 2). Based on expression profiles of the genes encoding mitochondrial proteins composing the PMD regulon and taking into consideration published data on regulation of such proteins in response to certain mitochondrial dysfunctions, it can be divided into 6 “clusters” (Fig. 2). Each of these clusters denotes a distinct type of partial mitochondrial dysfunction that elicits a different signaling pathway governed by a distinct set of transcription factors. The PMD regulon includes the following clusters: (1) rho0 cluster (which is governed by Rtg2p, a sensor of an age-related reduction of mitochondrial membrane potential);4,41,52-56 (2) S1 cluster;4,52,54,55 (3) general TCA cycle dysfunction cluster;4,52,53,55 (4) kgd1D, kgd2D or lpd1D cluster;4,53-55 (5) yme1D mdl1D cluster;4,55 and (6) afo1D cluster (which is governed by Sfp1p, a transcription activator of genes encoding cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins).4,57 The OS regulon includes the following clusters: (1) a cluster governed by the transcription factor Yap1p, a primary determinant in the antioxidant response of yeast cells;58-64 (2) a cluster governed by the transcription factors Msn2p/Msn4p, which are required for expression of numerous genes in response to thermal, oxidative and other types of stress;56,62-65 (3) a cluster governed by the transcription factor Skn7p, which is involved in the osmotic and oxidative stress responses;58-64 and (4) a cluster governed by Hog1p, a mitogen-activated protein kinase orchestrating an osmosensing signal transduction pathway in yeast.64,66,67 It needs to be emphasized that mitochondrial proteins constituting the PMD and OS regulons exhibit 3 different patterns of the age-related dynamics of changes in their cellular levels; to underscore the existence of such differences in expression, we separated each of the PMD and OS regulons into regulons “type 1”, “type 2” and “type 3” (Fig. 2 and Table S1). The cellular levels of mitochondrial proteins comprising the PMD and OS regulons type 1 remained nearly unchanged during diauxic (D) and postdiauxic (PD) growth phases but underwent a 2-3 fold increase or decrease during the subsequent stationary (ST) growth phase (Fig. 2; PMD regulon 1 and OS regulon 1). Furthermore, the cellular levels of mitochondrial proteins comprising the PMD and OS regulons type 2 elevated by 2-3 folds during D and PD growth phases but remained almost unaltered during the following ST growth phase (Fig. 2; PMD regulon 2 and OS regulon 2). Moreover, the cellular levels of mitochondrial proteins comprising the PMD and OS regulons type 3 remained nearly the same during the most of D and PD growth phases but underwent a 3-4 fold reduction during the subsequent ST growth phase

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(Fig. 2; PMD regulon 3 and OS regulon 3). Noteworthy, the expression of genes encoding mitochondrial proteins that belong to the PMD regulons type 1, 2 and 3 is known to be regulated by the transcription factors Rtg1p/Rtg2p/Rtg3p, Sfp1p and Aft1p.4,56,57 The expression of genes coding for mitochondrial proteins that belong to the OS regulons type 1, 2 and 3 has been shown to be under the control of the transcription factors Yap1p, Msn2p/Msn4p, Skn7p and Hog1p.58-63,65-67 LCA causes age-related changes in cellular proteome Age-related alterations in the rates and efficiencies of several processes within mitochondria are known to modulate the capacity of these organelles to make and release certain molecular signals; outside mitochondria, such signals have been shown to cause changes in the rates and efficiencies of longevity-defining processes in other cellular locations.3-6,16,20,25,31,33,56 Of note, we found that a treatment of yeast cells with LCA alters the agerelated chronology of these mitochondrial processes.5,36,38,68-70 We therefore hypothesized that LCA may impact not only the levels of numerous mitochondrial proteins but also the levels of proteins in cellular locations outside mitochondria. To validate our hypothesis, we used quantitative mass spectrometry to compare proteins that were recovered in total lysates of WT cells cultured in the presence of LCA or in its absence. This quantitative analysis of cellular proteins confirmed the data of such analysis for proteins recovered in purified mitochondria; indeed, we revealed that LCA alters the age-related dynamics of changes in levels of many mitochondrial proteins known for their essential roles in vital mitochondrial functions and aging in yeast (compare Figs. 1 and 3, as well as Tables S1 and S2). Moreover, we found that LCA causes age-related changes in levels of numerous proteins known to be located outside of mitochondria and shown to be involved in various cellular processes (Fig. 3 and Table S2). These cellular processes include the following: (1) glycogen degradation; (2) the glycolytic pathway; (3) the pentose phosphate pathway; (4) pyruvate conversion to acetyl-CoA; (5) the maintenance of redox balance between NAD and NADH with the help of carnitine and glycerol-3-phosphate shuttles; (6) ROS detoxification; (7) stress response; (8) glutathione synthesis; (9) gluconeogenesis; (10) ethanol formation; (11) the synthesis and hydrolytic degradation of triacylglycerols (TAG) and ergosteryl esters (EE), the 2 major neutral lipids; (12) the synthesis of various amino acids; (13) nucleotide synthesis; (14) the assembly of the 40S and 60S ribosomal subunits from numerous protein components whose levels were altered by LCA; and (15) proteasomal and vacuolar protein degradation.4,5,39,41,38,71,72 We then subjected cellular proteins whose levels were changed in yeast grown in a medium supplemented with LCA to bioinformatic analysis with the help of the SPELL online search engine,51 as described above for mitochondrial proteins. Just as our bioinformatic analysis of mitochondrial proteins revealed (see above), we found that each of the cellular proteins whose level was altered in yeast cultured with LCA belongs to the following 2 multi-clustered regulons: (1) the PMD regulon, which consisted of the rho0 (Rtg2p governed) cluster, S1 cluster, general TCA cycle dysfunction cluster, kgd1D, kgd2D or lpd1D cluster, yme1Dmdl1D

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Figure 2. The mitochondrial proteins whose levels are altered in an age-related fashion in yeast cells cultured with LCA can be divided into 2 regulons called a partial mitochondrial dysfunction (PMD) regulon and an oxidative stress (OS) regulon. Each regulon is modulated by a different kind of mitochondrial dysfunction. Based on expression profiles of the genes encoding mitochondrial proteins composing the PMD and OS regulons and considering published data on regulation of such proteins in response to certain mitochondrial dysfunctions, each regulon can be divided into several “clusters”. Each cluster denotes a distinct type of partial mitochondrial dysfunction that elicits a different signaling pathway mediated by a distinct set of transcription factors. Because mitochondrial proteins constituting the PMD and OS regulons exhibit 3 different patterns of the age-related dynamics of changes in their cellular levels, each of these regulons is separated into regulons “type 1”, “type 2” and “type 3”. The names of proteins that belong to more than one PMD or OS regulon are italicized; the names of proteins that are members of both a PMD regulon and an OS regulon are underlined. Abbreviations: D, diauxic growth phase; PD, post-diauxic growth phase; ST, stationary growth phase.

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Figure 3. LCA alters the age-related dynamics of changes in levels of many mitochondrial proteins and numerous proteins located outside of mitochondria; these mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial proteins have been implicated in various cellular processes. Wild-type cells were cultured in the nutrient-rich YP medium initially containing 0.2% glucose, with 50 50 mM mu;M LCA or without it. Cells were recovered on days 2, 5 and 9 of culturing (D, PD and ST growth phases, respectively). Mass spectrometry-based identification and quantitation of proteins recovered in total lysates of yeast cells were performed as described in “Materials and Methods”. Relative levels of proteins in cells cultured in the presence of LCA (fold difference relative to those in the absence of LCA) are shown. Abbreviations: C, cytosol; D, diauxic growth phase; EE, ergosteryl esters; ETC, the mitochondrial electron transport chain; M, mitochondria; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; PD, post-diauxic growth phase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; ST, stationary growth phase; TAG, triacylglycerols; TCA, the tricarboxylic acid cycle in mitochondria.

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cluster, and afo1D (Sfp1p governed) cluster;4,5,41,52-57 and (2) the OS regulon, which included the Yap1p governed cluster, Msn2p/ Msn4p governed cluster, Skn7p governed cluster and Hog1p governed cluster (Fig. 4).4,5,56,58-63,65-67 We also found that, akin to mitochondrial proteins constituting the PMD and OS regulons, cellular proteins that belong to each of them displays either of the following 3 patterns of age-related changes in their levels: (1) the levels of cellular proteins that belong to the PMD and OS regulons type 1 remained nearly unchanged during D and PD growth phases but underwent a 3–4 fold rise or reduction during the subsequent ST growth phase (Fig. 4; PMD regulon 1 and OS regulon 1); (2) the levels of cellular proteins that belong to the PMD and OS regulons type 2 increased by 3–4 folds during D and PD growth phases but remained almost unaltered during the following ST growth phase (Fig. 4; PMD regulon 2 and OS regulon 2); and (3) the levels of cellular proteins that belong to the PMD and OS regulons type 3 remained practically the same during the most of D and PD growth phases but underwent a 2-4 fold-reduction or rise during the subsequent ST growth phase (Fig. 4; PMD regulon 3 and OS regulon 3). Moreover, we noted that: (1) similar to mitochondrial proteins constituting the 3 different PMD regulons, the expression of genes for cellular proteins that belong to the PMD regulons type 1, 2 and 3 has been shown to be governed by the transcription factors Rtg1p/Rtg2p/Rtg3p, Sfp1p and Aft1p;4,56,57 and (2) akin to mitochondrial proteins constituting the 3 different OS regulons, the expression of genes for cellular proteins that belong to the OS regulons type 1, 2 and 3 is known to be controlled by the transcription factors Yap1p, Msn2p/Msn4p, Skn7p and Hog1p.5863,65-67

Longevity extension by LCA requires a distinct set of transcription factors We found that gene-deletion mutations eliminating either the Rtg1p, Rtg2p, Rtg3p, Sfp1p, Yap1p, Msn2p/Msn4p, Skn7p or Hog1p transcription factor(s) significantly reduce the extent to which LCA extends yeast longevity (Figs. 5 and S1); all these factors are known to cause a development of an anti-aging cellular pattern by activating specific transcriptional programs in the nucleus.4,5,55-63,65-67 In contrast, a single-gene-deletion mutation eliminating the transcription factor Aft1p increased the longevity-extending efficiency of LCA (Figs. 5 and S1); this factor has been shown to respond to reduced levels of cellular ISC by eliciting a pro-aging transcriptional program in the nucleus.4,5,73,74 In sum, these findings suggest that, by establishing a specific pattern of an age-related expression of numerous nuclear genes encoding mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial proteins that belong to the PMD or OS regulons of type 1, 2 or 3, each of these transcription factors plays an essential role in longevity extension by LCA.

Discussion This study and our recent published data36 suggest that LCAdriven changes in mitochondrial lipidome alter mitochondrial

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proteome and functionality, thereby enabling mitochondria to function as signaling organelles that orchestrate an establishment of an anti-aging transcriptional program for many longevitydefining nuclear genes (Fig. 6). It is conceivable that the reduced mitochondrial membrane potential seen in chronologically “young” yeast cells cultured with LCA36 triggers the mitochondrial retrograde (RTG) signaling pathway of cellular aging regulation (Fig. 6); the Rtg2p protein component of this pathway is known to respond to a decline in mitochondrial membrane potential by stimulating nuclear import of the Rtg1p-Rtg3p heterodimeric transcription factor, which in the nucleus triggers an anti-aging transcriptional program.4,5,56 Furthermore, the observed in chronologically “old” yeast cells cultured with LCA reduction in the levels of several protein components of the large and small subunits of mitochondrial ribosome (Figs. 1 and 2) is likely to activate the so-called back-signaling pathway (Fig. 6); in response to reduced levels of mitochondrial ribosomal proteins this pathway is known to trigger an anti-aging transcriptional program which in the nucleus is activated by the transcription factor Sfp1p.4,5,57 Moreover, it is plausible that the observed in chronologically “old” yeast cells cultured with LCA rise in the levels of proteins involved in the synthesis and assembly of ISC in mitochondria (Figs. 1 and 2) may diminish activity and/or nuclear import of Aft1p (Fig. 6), a transcription factor known to respond to reduced levels of cellular ISC by driving a pro-aging transcriptional program in the nucleus.4,5,73,74 It is also conceivable that the observed in chronologically “young” and “old” yeast cells cultured with LCA significant changes in the levels of numerous mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial proteins comprising the yme1Dmdl1D cluster of the PMD regulon (Figs. 1 to 4) activate a distinct retrograde response signaling pathway that triggers an anti-aging transcriptional program in the nucleus (Fig. 6); this pathway is known to be elicited in response to a simultaneous lack of the mitochondrial i-AAA protease Yme1p and the mitochondrial ABC-transporter Mdl1p involved in peptide export from mitochondria.4,5,55 Finally, the observed ability of LCA to amplify the “hormetic”, anti-aging effect of mitochondrially generated ROS by enabling to maintain their levels in chronologically “old” yeast cells relatively high but below a cytotoxic threshold5,36 is likely to delay aging by activating Yap1p, Msn2p/Msn4p, Skn7p or Hog1p (Fig. 6); these transcription factors are known to respond to “hormetic” levels of ROS by triggering an anti-aging transcriptional program in the nucleus.4,5,58-63,65-67 Of note, the expression of many proteins that belong to the PMD and OS regulons types 1 and 3 is reduced in the presence of LCA (Figs. 2 and 4); yet, most of the above transcription factors are known to activate transcription of nuclear genes encoding many of these proteins.4,5,55-63,65-67,73,74 It is conceivable therefore that LCA-driven changes in mitochondrial lipidome, proteome and functionality may orchestrate an establishment of an anti-aging transcriptional program for many longevity-defining nuclear genes by: (1) inhibiting activities of some of these transcriptional activators with respect to some of their target genes, thereby repressing transcription of these genes; (2) remodeling multimeric protein complexes formed by some of these

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Figure 4. Each of the cellular proteins whose level is changed in yeast cultured with LCA belongs to the following 2 multi-clustered regulons, each modulated by a different kind of mitochondrial dysfunction: 1) the partial mitochondrial dysfunction (PMD) regulon, which consisted of the rho0 (Rtg2p governed) cluster, S1 cluster, general TCA cycle dysfunction cluster, kgd1D, kgd2D or lpd1D cluster, yme1Dmdl1D cluster, and afo1D (Sfp1p governed) cluster; and 2) the oxidative stress (OS) regulon, which included the Yap1p governed cluster, Msn2p/Msn4p governed cluster, Skn7p governed cluster and Hog1p governed cluster. Each cluster denotes a distinct type of partial mitochondrial dysfunction that elicits a different signaling pathway governed by a distinct set of transcription factors. Because cellular proteins that belong to the PMD and OS regulons display 3 different patterns of age-related changes in their levels, each of these regulons is separated into regulons “type 1”, “type 2” and “type 3”. The names of cellular proteins that belong to more than one PMD or OS regulon are italicized; the names of cellular proteins that are members of both a PMD regulon and an OS regulon are underlined. Abbreviations: D, diauxic growth phase; PD, post-diauxic growth phase; ST, stationary growth phase.

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Figure 5. Gene-deletion mutations eliminating the Rtg1p, Rtg2p, Rtg3p, Sfp1p, Aft1p, Yap1p, Msn2p/Msn4p, Skn7p or Hog1p transcription factor significantly alter the extent to which LCA extends yeast longevity. Wildtype and mutant cells lacking one (or 2, as in case of msn2/4D mutant cells) of the above transcription factors were cultured in the nutrient-rich YP medium initially containing 0.2% glucose, with 50 50 mM mu;M LCA or without it. The chronological lifespans were measured as described in “Materials and Methods”. Data are presented as means § SEM (n D 4–6; *p < 0.01).

transcriptional activators in the nucleus, thus repressing transcription of some of the target genes; and/or (3) eliciting certain other, presently unknown, changes in the activities and/or target specificities of some of these transcriptional activators. Furthermore, a substantial increase in the levels of proteins constituting the PMD and OS regulons type 2 occurs during D and PD growth phases; this expression pattern precedes the significant alterations in the levels of proteins comprising the PMD and OS regulons types 1 and 3 during the subsequent ST phase (Figs. 2 and 4). One could assume therefore that proteins constituting the PMD and OS regulons type 2 may somehow (directly or indirectly) modulate the expression of proteins comprising the PMD and OS regulons types 1 and 3. Because none of the proteins within the type 2 regulons is known to be a transcription factor (Figs. 2 and 4),39 a mechanism underlying such hypothetical relationship between these regulons is unlikely to involve transcriptional regulation of the genes that encode proteins within the PMD and OS regulons types 1 and 3. Moreover, this study and our published data5,36,38,68-70,72 suggest the following model for how LCA-driven changes in

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mitochondrial proteome and functionality early and late in life of chronologically aging yeast cause a stepwise development of an anti-aging cellular pattern and its maintenance throughout lifespan (Fig. 7). Early in life of a chronologically aging yeast cell, during the D phase of growth, LCA within the inner and outer membranes of mitochondria reduces the capacities of coupled mitochondrial respiration, mitochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial ROS production (Fig. 7)-likely by decreasing the levels of the “upstream” protein components (i.e. Ndi1p, Nde1p, Nde2p and Sdh1p-Sdh4p) of the mitochondrial ETC and increasing the levels of its “downstream” protein components (i.e., cytochrome c as well as respiratory complexes III, IV and V) (Figs. 1 to 4). It is conceivable that such changes in expression pattern are responsible in part for the observed ability of mitochondria in yeast treated with LCA to sustain the concentration of ROS at a sublethal (hormetic) level (Fig. 7);36,38,68-70 if sustained at such level, ROS are known to promote the development and maintenance of an anti-aging cellular pattern.3-6 By differentially altering the levels of proteins involved in the mitochondrial TCA cycle (Figs. 1 to 4), LCA increases the efficiencies with which some of the intermediates of this cycle are converted into amino acids, NADPH and heme within mitochondria (Fig. 7); the rates of such conversion during D growth phase are further elevated by the LCA-elicited rise in the levels of mitochondrial enzymes catalyzing the key reactions of the conversion (Figs. 1 to 4). The rise in the levels of proteins known to be essential for the synthesis, processing and translation of various mitochondrial RNA species, which is observed in mitochondria of cultured with LCA cells during D growth phase (Figs. 1 to 4), improves mitochondrial functionality by stimulating these processes within mitochondria (Fig. 7). Furthermore, the elevated levels of mitochondrial components involved in protein import into the inner membrane, intermembrane space and matrix of mitochondria (Figs. 1 to 4) accelerate these processes during D growth phase, thus further improving mitochondrial functionality (Fig. 7) (these components include Mia40p, Tim23p and Ssc1p;44,49,50 it remains to be determined whether or not the observed elevated levels of only these 3 key members of the multi-component machinery driving mitochondrial protein import are sufficient to accelerate such import in yeast treated with LCA). Additionally, by increasing the levels of mtDNA-binding proteins during D growth phase (Figs. 1 to 4), LCA stabilizes the mitochondrial nucleoid and protects it from oxidative and other forms of age-related damage (Fig. 7). During the D phase of growth, LCA within the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes also elevates the levels of mitochondrial membrane proteins required for acetyl-CoA uptake by mitochondria (Figs. 1 to 4); moreover, the altered functionality of these mitochondria triggers several mitochondria-to-nucleus signaling pathways that differentially affect cellular levels of non-mitochondrial proteins involved in various metabolic pathways for carbohydrates and lipids (Figs. 1 to 4). The resulting remodeling of these pathways in yeast cells cultured in the presence of LCA (1) stimulates glycogen degradation, glycolysis, acetyl-CoA formation in the cytosol and neutral lipids synthesis in the ER - thus increasing the levels of NADH, ATP

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mitochondrial respiration, mitochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial ROS production (Fig. 7). By increasing the levels of stress response proteins implicated in mitochondrial protein import, folding, stress protection and membrane proteins biogenesis (Figs. 1–4), LCA stimulates all these longevity-defining processes in mitochondria of yeast cells that have entered the PD phase of growth (Fig. 7). Furthermore, a sustained ability of LCA to increase the levels of mtDNAbinding proteins during PD growth phase (Figs. 1–4) enables it to support mitochondrial nucleoid stability and protection from age-related damage (Fig. 7). Moreover, by increasing the levels of numerous mitochondrial proteins integrated into a network of antioxidant scavenger reactions for ROS decomposition (Figs. 1– 4), LCA attenuates oxidative damage to mitochondrial proteins, lipids and nucleic acids (Fig. 7). In addition, the altered functionality of mitochondria in cells cultured with LCA triggers mitochondria-to-nucleus signaling that during PD growth Figure 6. A model for how LCA-driven changes in mitochondrial lipidome alter mitochondrial proteome and phase increases the levels functionality, thereby enabling mitochondria to function as signaling organelles modulating transcription of of non-mitochondrial proteins many longevity-defining nuclear genes. See text for details. Abbreviations: Ac-CoA, acetyl-CoA; ETC, the mitoinvolved in the pentose phoschondrial electron transport chain; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; ROS, reactive oxygen species; ST, stationary phate pathway (Figs. 1–4); this growth phase; TCA, the tricarboxylic acid cycle in mitochondria. pathway is known to generate NADPH, the primary source of cellular reducing equivalents and neutral lipids; and (2) inhibits ethanol formation from acet- required for the reductive synthesis of fatty acids, sterols and aldehyde, acyl-CoA conversion to acetate, gluconeogenetic some amino acids as well as for the protection of numerous metabolism of pyruvate and the lipolytic conversion of neutral thiol-containing cytosolic, nuclear and mitochondrial proteins lipids into fatty acids - thereby further stimulating acetyl-CoA from oxidative damage (Fig. 7).5,75 formation in the cytosol, from which it is then transported with During ST phase, LCA within mitochondria maintains its abilthe increased efficiency into mitochondria to improve their func- ity to elevate the levels of many mitochondrial proteins involved in tionality (Fig. 7).4,5 antioxidant scavenger reactions for ROS decomposition (Figs. 1– During the subsequent PD phase of growth, LCA within the 4), thus reducing the extent of oxidative damage to mitochondrial inner and outer mitochondrial membranes not only maintains its proteins, lipids and nucleic acids (Fig. 7). In addition, LCA attenuability to decrease the levels of the “upstream” protein compo- ates mitochondrial fragmentation during ST phase by reducing the nents of the mitochondrial ETC and to increase the levels of its levels of the Caf4p and Mdv1p protein components of mitochon“downstream” protein components but also elevates the level of drial fission machinery (Figs. 1–4)-thus delaying an age-related the mitochondrial cytochrome-c peroxidase Ccp1p (Figs. 1–4) – form of programmed apoptotic cell death (Fig. 7). During ST thus enabling to sustain reduced capacities of coupled phase, the altered functionality of mitochondria in yeast cultured in

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Figure 7. For figure legend, see page 1654.

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Figure 7 (See previous page). A model for how LCA-driven changes in mitochondrial proteome and functionality early and late in life of chronologically aging yeast orchestrate a stepwise development of an anti-aging cellular pattern and its maintenance throughout lifespan. From the data of proteomic analysis (Figs. 1–4) and based on the data of biochemical and cell biological analyses,36,38,68–70,72,84,85 we inferred an outline of metabolic pathways and processes that were activated (red arrows) or inhibited (green arrows) in cells cultured with exogenous LCA. Arrows next to the names of metabolites, proteins or processes denote those of them whose concentrations or efficiencies were elevated (red arrows) or reduced (green arrows) in cells cultured with exogenous LCA. Abbreviations: Ac-CoA, acetyl-CoA; D, diauxic growth phase; EE, ethyl esters; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; EtOH, ethanol; ETC, the mitochondrial electron transport chain; FFA, free fatty acids; IMM, inner mitochondrial membrane; LD, lipid droplets; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; OMM, outer mitochondrial membrane; PD, post-diauxic growth phase; ST, stationary growth phase; TAG, triacylglycerols; TCA, the tricarboxylic acid cycle in mitochondria. See text for details.

the presence of LCA also stimulates several mitochondria-tonucleus signaling pathways that differentially affect cellular levels of many non-mitochondrial proteins involved in various longevitydefining processes (Figs. 1–4). The resulting remodeling of these processes outside mitochondria (1) reduces the extent of oxidative damage to cytosolic proteins; (2) stimulates protein folding, unfolding and refolding in the cytosol; (3) promotes vacuolar and proteasomal protein degradation; (4) slows down amino acid and nucleotide synthesis in the cytosol; and (5) decelerates protein synthesis in the cytosol by attenuating the assembly of the 40S and 60S ribosomal subunits (Fig. 7). In the future, it would be important to further explore the following key aspects of the mechanism proposed here through which yeast mitochondria function as signaling organelles orchestrating a stepwise development of a longevity-defining cellular pattern. First, it is intriguing to investigate how several genetic interventions known to cause various changes in the mitochondrial membrane lipidome76-79 influence the ability of LCA (1) to extend longevity of chronologically aging yeast; (2) to elicit a characteristic set of age-related changes in mitochondrial proteome and functionality; and (3) to cause a distinct kind of agerelated alterations in the levels of proteins outside mitochondria. Second, it is interesting to elucidate how genetic interventions known to alter mitochondrial membrane potential, mitochondrial ribosomal proteins, mitochondrial synthesis and assembly of ISC, mitochondrial protein degradation and peptide efflux, or mitochondrial ROS4,5 impact the capability of LCA to trigger a characteristic pattern of age-related changes in the concentrations of proteins located outside of mitochondria. Third, it will be important to use quantitative mass spectrometric metabolomics to confirm the anti-aging “metabolic signature” whose stepwise development is driven by LCA that accumulates in mitochondria of chronologically aging yeast.

Materials and Methods Yeast strains and growth conditions The WT strain BY4742 (MATa his3D1 leu2D0 lys2D0 ura3D0), single-gene-deletion mutant strains in the BY4742 genetic background (all from Thermo Scientific/Open Biosystems) and the msn2/4D mutant strain (constructed as previously described, see ref. 80) were grown in YP medium (1% yeast extract, 2% peptone) initially containing 0.2% glucose as carbon source. Cells were cultured at 30 C with rotational shaking at 200 rpm in Erlenmeyer flasks at a “flask volume/medium volume” ratio of 5:1.

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Pharmacological manipulation of chronological lifespan Chronological lifespan assay and pharmacological manipulation of chronological lifespan by addition of LCA (Sigma) were performed as previously described.38 The stock solution of LCA in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was made on the day of adding this compound to cell cultures. LCA was added to growth medium in DMSO at the final concentration of 50 50 mM mu;M immediately following cell inoculation into the medium. The final concentration of DMSO in yeast cultures supplemented with LCA (and in the corresponding control cultures supplemented with compound vehicle) was 1% (v/v). Miscellaneous procedures Preparation of total cell lysates,37 purification of mitochondria,81 SDS-PAGE,82 quantitative mass spectrometric analysis of proteins37 and statistical analysis83 were performed as previously described. Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest

No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed. Acknowledgments

We acknowledge the Centre for Biological Applications of Mass Spectrometry and the Centre for Structural and Functional Genomics, both at Concordia University, for outstanding services. Funding

This study was supported by grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada and Concordia University Chair Fund. A.B., V.R.R. and T.B.V. were supported by Frederick Banting and Charles Best Doctoral Scholarship Awards from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). P.K. was supported by Doctoral Research Fellowship Awards from the Fonds de recherche en sante du Quebec and from the Fonds quebecois de la recherche sur la nature et les technologies. A.P. was supported by a Frederick Banting and Charles Best Canada Master’s Scholarship Award from the CIHR. V.S. was supported by an NSERC Undergraduate Summer Research Award. V.I.T. is a Concordia University Research Chair in Genomics, Cell Biology and Aging. Supplemental Material

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed on the publisher’s website.

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Volume 14 Issue 11

Our Cell Cycle paper on how LCA impacts mitochondrial and ...

Vincent R Richarda ... Tatiana Boukh-Viner, Pavlo Kyryakov, Alejandra Gomez- Perez, Anthony Arlia-Ciommo, ... form to anyone is expressly forbidden. .... Our Cell Cycle paper on how LCA impacts mitochondrial and cellular proteomes.pdf.

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