4.6 Article

Unremodeled and Remodeled Cardiolipin Are Functionally Indistinguishable in Yeast

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 3, Pages 1768-1778

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.525733

Keywords

Bioenergetics; Electron Transfer Complex; Cardiolipin; Membrane Biogenesis; Membrane Lipids; Mitochondria; Mitochondrial Diseases; Phospholipid; Yeast

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R00HL089185, 1R01HL108882]
  2. NCRR [SRR022588A]
  3. National Science Foundation [MCB-1024908]
  4. intramural institutional research funds
  5. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences [1330695, 1024908] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Background: The phospholipid cardiolipin undergoes acyl chain remodeling after biosynthesis, which has been hypothesized to optimize mitochondrial function. Results: cld1 yeast, containing unremodeled cardiolipin, have no mitochondrial morphology or oxidative phosphorylation defects. Conclusion: Cardiolipin remodeling is not required for optimal mitochondrial bioenergetic function in yeast. Significance: Cardiolipin remodeling may be important for presently unknown mitochondrial processes and/or have unappreciated physiological functions. After biosynthesis, an evolutionarily conserved acyl chain remodeling process generates a final highly homogeneous and yet tissue-specific molecular form of the mitochondrial lipid cardiolipin. Hence, cardiolipin molecules in different organisms, and even different tissues within the same organism, contain a distinct collection of attached acyl chains. This observation is the basis for the widely accepted paradigm that the acyl chain composition of cardiolipin is matched to the unique mitochondrial demands of a tissue. For this hypothesis to be correct, cardiolipin molecules with different acyl chain compositions should have distinct functional capacities, and cardiolipin that has been remodeled should promote cardiolipin-dependent mitochondrial processes better than its unremodeled form. However, functional disparities between different molecular forms of cardiolipin have never been established. Here, we interrogate this simple but crucial prediction utilizing the best available model to do so, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Specifically, we compare the ability of unremodeled and remodeled cardiolipin, which differ markedly in their acyl chain composition, to support mitochondrial activities known to require cardiolipin. Surprisingly, defined changes in the acyl chain composition of cardiolipin do not alter either mitochondrial morphology or oxidative phosphorylation. Importantly, preventing cardiolipin remodeling initiation in yeast lacking TAZ1, an ortholog of the causative gene in Barth syndrome, ameliorates mitochondrial dysfunction. Thus, our data do not support the prevailing hypothesis that unremodeled cardiolipin is functionally distinct from remodeled cardiolipin, at least for the functions examined, suggesting alternative physiological roles for this conserved pathway.

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