Abstract

Hypoxia is common in marine environments and a major stressor for marine organisms inhabiting benthic and intertidal zones. Several studies have explored the responses of these organisms to hypoxic stress at the whole organism level with a focus on energy metabolism and mitochondrial response, but the instrinsic mitochondrial responses that support the organelle’s function under hypoxia and reoxygenation (H/R) stress are not well understood. We studied the effects of acute H/R stress (10 min anoxia followed by 15 min reoxygenation) on mitochondrial respiration, production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and posttranslational modifications (PTM) of the proteome in a marine facultative anaerobe, the blue musselMytilus edulis. The mussels’ mitochondria showed increased OXPHOS respiration and suppressed proton leak resulting in a higher coupling efficiency after H/R stress. ROS production decreased in both the resting (LEAK) and phosphorylating (OXPHOS) state indicating thatM. eduliswas able to prevent oxidative stress and mitochondrial damage during reoxygenation. Hypoxia did not lead to rearrangement of the mitochondrial supercomplexes but impacted the mitochondrial phosphoproteome including the proteins involved in OXPHOS, amino acid- and fatty acid catabolism, and protein quality control. This study indicates that mussels’ mitochondria possess intrinsic mechanisms (including regulation via reversible protein phosphorylation) that ensure high respiratory flux and mitigate oxidative damage during H/R stress and contribute to the hypoxia-tolerant mitochondrial phenotype of this metabolically plastic species.

Highlights

  • Oxygen deficiency is a major stressor for aerobic eukaryotes that depend on oxygen to drive mitochondrial ATP synthesis

  • We determined the abundance of the supercomplexes and shifts in the mitochondrial phosphoproteome in the isolated mitochondria of M. edulis exposed to hypoxia and reoxygenation (H/R) stress in vitro

  • Our present study indicates that the mitochondria of the blue mussels M. edulis show features consistent with the hypoxia-tolerant phenotype

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Summary

Introduction

Oxygen deficiency (hypoxia) is a major stressor for aerobic eukaryotes that depend on oxygen to drive mitochondrial ATP synthesis. For these organisms, oxygen fluctuations are stressful due to the limitations of energy supply during hypoxia, as well as the oxidative stress and high costs of recovery during reoxygenation (Garbarino et al, 2015; Lesnefsky et al, 2017; Sokolova et al, 2019). The metabolically arrested state allows only time-limited survival, and to continue the life cycle, the organisms depend on the return of oxygen. Tolerance to frequent oxygen fluctuations requires maintenance of the mitochondrial integrity and rapid restoration of the energetic and redox homeostasis during reoxygenation (Honda et al, 2005; Pamenter, 2014; Pell et al, 2016; Sokolova et al, 2019)

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