Copy Link
Add to Bookmark
Report
dictyNews Volume 33 Number 09
dictyNews
Electronic Edition
Volume 33, number 9
October 9, 2009
Please submit abstracts of your papers as soon as they have been
accepted for publication by sending them to dicty@northwestern.edu
or by using the form at
http://dictybase.org/db/cgi-bin/dictyBase/abstract_submit.
Back issues of dictyNews, the Dicty Reference database and other
useful information is available at dictyBase - http://dictybase.org.
Follow dictyBase now on twitter:
http://twitter.com/dictybase
=========
Abstracts
=========
Dynamics of the Dictyostelium discoideum mitochondrial proteome during
vegetative growth, starvation and early stages of development
Malgorzata Czarna 1,2,§, Gregory Mathy 1, Allan Mac’Cord 1, Rowan Dobson 3,
Wieslawa Jarmuszkiewicz 2, Claudine M. Sluse-Goffart 1, Pierre Leprince 4,
Edwin De Pauw 3 and Francis E. Sluse 1
1 Laboratory of Bioenergetics and Cellular Physiology, University of Liege, Belgium
2 Laboratory of Bioenergetics, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland
3 Laboratory of Mass Spectrometry, University of Liege, Belgium
4 GIGA-Neuroscience, University of Liege, Belgium
§ Present address: Institute of Microbiology, Free University of Berlin, Germany,
E-mail: m.czarna@fu-berlin.de
Proteomics, in press
In this study a quantitative comparative proteomics approach has been used to
analyze the D. discoideum mitochondrial proteome variations during vegetative
growth, starvation and the early stages of development. Application of 2D-DIGE
technology allowed the detection of around 2000 protein spots on each
two-dimensional gel with 180 proteins exhibiting significant changes in their
expression level. In total, 96 proteins (51 unique and 45 redundant) were
unambiguously identified. We show that the D. discoideum mitochondrial
proteome adaptations mainly affect energy metabolism enzymes (the Krebs
cycle, anaplerotic pathways, the oxidative phosphorylation system and
energy dissipation), proteins involved in developmental and signalling
processes as well as in protein biosynthesis and fate. The most striking
observations were the opposite regulation of expression of citrate synthase
and aconitase and the very large variation in the expression of the alternative
oxidase (AOX) that highlighted the importance of citrate and AOX in the
physiology of the development of D. discoideum. Mitochondrial energy states
measured in vivo with MitoTracker Orange CMTMRos showed an increase
in mitochondrial membrane polarisation during D. discoideum starvation and
starvation-induced development.
Submitted by Malgorzata Czarna [m.czarna@fu-berlin.de]
==============================================================
[End dictyNews, volume 33, number 9]