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Dive into the research topics where Paul D. Hutchins is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul D. Hutchins.


Nature Biotechnology | 2016

Mitochondrial protein functions elucidated by multi-omic mass spectrometry profiling

Jonathan A. Stefely; Nicholas W. Kwiecien; Elyse C. Freiberger; Alicia L. Richards; Adam Jochem; Matthew J. P. Rush; Arne Ulbrich; Kyle P Robinson; Paul D. Hutchins; Mike T. Veling; Xiao Guo; Zachary A. Kemmerer; Kyle J Connors; Edna A Trujillo; Jacob Sokol; Harald Marx; Michael S. Westphall; Alexander S. Hebert; David J. Pagliarini; Joshua J. Coon

Mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with many human diseases, including cancer and neurodegeneration, that are often linked to proteins and pathways that are not well-characterized. To begin defining the functions of such poorly characterized proteins, we used mass spectrometry to map the proteomes, lipidomes, and metabolomes of 174 yeast strains, each lacking a single gene related to mitochondrial biology. 144 of these genes have human homologs, 60 of which are associated with disease and 39 of which are uncharacterized. We present a multi-omic data analysis and visualization tool that we use to find covariance networks that can predict molecular functions, correlations between profiles of related gene deletions, gene-specific perturbations that reflect protein functions, and a global respiration deficiency response. Using this multi-omic approach, we link seven proteins including Hfd1p and its human homolog ALDH3A1 to mitochondrial coenzyme Q (CoQ) biosynthesis, an essential pathway disrupted in many human diseases. This Resource should provide molecular insights into mitochondrial protein functions.


Molecular Cell | 2016

Cerebellar Ataxia and Coenzyme Q Deficiency through Loss of Unorthodox Kinase Activity

Jonathan A. Stefely; Floriana Licitra; Leila Laredj; Andrew G. Reidenbach; Zachary A. Kemmerer; Anais Grangeray; Tiphaine Jaeg-Ehret; Catherine E. Minogue; Arne Ulbrich; Paul D. Hutchins; Emily M. Wilkerson; Zheng Ruan; Deniz Aydin; Alexander S. Hebert; Xiao Guo; Elyse C. Freiberger; Laurence Reutenauer; Adam Jochem; Maya Chergova; Isabel Johnson; Danielle C. Lohman; Matthew J. P. Rush; Nicholas W. Kwiecien; Pankaj K. Singh; Anna Schlagowski; Brendan J. Floyd; Ulrika Forsman; Pavel J. Sindelar; Michael S. Westphall; Fabien Pierrel

The UbiB protein kinase-like (PKL) family is widespread, comprising one-quarter of microbial PKLs and five human homologs, yet its biochemical activities remain obscure. COQ8A (ADCK3) is a mammalian UbiB protein associated with ubiquinone (CoQ) biosynthesis and an ataxia (ARCA2) through unclear means. We show that mice lacking COQ8A develop a slowly progressive cerebellar ataxia linked to Purkinje cell dysfunction and mild exercise intolerance, recapitulating ARCA2. Interspecies biochemical analyses show that COQ8A and yeast Coq8p specifically stabilize a CoQ biosynthesis complex through unorthodox PKL functions. Although COQ8 was predicted to be a protein kinase, we demonstrate that it lacks canonical protein kinase activity in trans. Instead, COQ8 has ATPase activity and interacts with lipid CoQ intermediates, functions that are likely conserved across all domains of life. Collectively, our results lend insight into the molecular activities of the ancient UbiB family and elucidate the biochemical underpinnings of a human disease.


Cell Reports | 2017

Ptc7p Dephosphorylates Select Mitochondrial Proteins to Enhance Metabolic Function

Xiao Guo; Natalie M. Niemi; Paul D. Hutchins; Samson G.F. Condon; Adam Jochem; Arne Ulbrich; Alan Higbee; Jason D. Russell; Alessandro Senes; Joshua J. Coon; David J. Pagliarini

Proper maintenance of mitochondrial activity is essential for metabolic homeostasis. Widespread phosphorylation of mitochondrial proteins may be an important element of this process; yet, little is known about which enzymes control mitochondrial phosphorylation or which phosphosites have functional impact. We investigate these issues by disrupting Ptc7p, a conserved but largely uncharacterized mitochondrial matrix PP2C-type phosphatase. Loss of Ptc7p causes respiratory growth defects concomitant with elevated phosphorylation of select matrix proteins. Among these, Δptc7 yeast exhibit an increase in phosphorylation of Cit1p, the canonical citrate synthase of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, that diminishes its activity. We find that phosphorylation of S462 can eliminate Cit1p enzymatic activity likely by disrupting its proper dimerization, and that Ptc7p-driven dephosphorylation rescues Cit1p activity. Collectively, our work connects Ptc7p to an essential TCA cycle function and to additional phosphorylation events that may affect mitochondrial activity inadvertently or in a regulatory manner.


eLife | 2016

Ongoing resolution of duplicate gene functions shapes the diversification of a metabolic network

Meihua Christina Kuang; Paul D. Hutchins; Jason D. Russell; Joshua J. Coon; Chris Todd Hittinger

The evolutionary mechanisms leading to duplicate gene retention are well understood, but the long-term impacts of paralog differentiation on the regulation of metabolism remain underappreciated. Here we experimentally dissect the functions of two pairs of ancient paralogs of the GALactose sugar utilization network in two yeast species. We show that the Saccharomyces uvarum network is more active, even as over-induction is prevented by a second co-repressor that the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae lacks. Surprisingly, removal of this repression system leads to a strong growth arrest, likely due to overly rapid galactose catabolism and metabolic overload. Alternative sugars, such as fructose, circumvent metabolic control systems and exacerbate this phenotype. We further show that S. cerevisiae experiences homologous metabolic constraints that are subtler due to how the paralogs have diversified. These results show how the functional differentiation of paralogs continues to shape regulatory network architectures and metabolic strategies long after initial preservation. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.19027.001


bioRxiv | 2017

Post-Transcriptional Control of Coenzyme Q Biosynthesis Revealed by Transomic Analysis of the RNA-Binding Protein Puf3p

Christophier P Lapointe; Jonathan A. Stefely; Adam Jochem; Paul D. Hutchins; Gary M. Wilson; Nicholas W. Kwiecien; Joshua J. Coon; Marvin Wickens; David J. Pagliarini

Coenzyme Q (CoQ) is a redox active lipid required for mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos). How CoQ biosynthesis is coordinated with the biogenesis of OxPhos protein complexes is unclear. Here, we show that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNA-binding protein (RBP) Puf3p directly regulates CoQ biosynthesis. To establish the mechanism for this regulation, we employed a transomic strategy to identify mRNAs that not only bind Puf3p, but also are regulated by Puf3p in vivo. The CoQ biosynthesis enzyme Coq5p is a critical Put3p target: Puf3p regulates the level of Coq5p and prevents its toxicity, thereby enabling efficient CoQ production. In parallel, Puf3p represses a specific set of proteins involved in mitochondrial protein import, translation, and OxPhos complex assembly — pathways essential to prime mitochondrial biogenesis. Our data reveal a mechanism for post-transcriptionally coordinating CoQ production with OxPhos biogenesis and, more broadly, demonstrate the power of transomics for defining genuine targets of RBPs. HIGHLIGHTS The RNA binding protein (RBP) Puf3p regulates coenzyme Q (CoQ) biosynthesis Transomic analysis of RNAs, proteins, lipids, and metabolites defines RBP targets Puf3p regulates the potentially toxic CoQ biosynthesis enzyme Coq5p Puf3p couples regulation of CoQ with a broader program for controlling mitochondria


bioRxiv | 2017

Conserved lipid and small molecule modulation of COQ8 reveals regulation of the ancient UbiB family

Andrew Reidenbach; Zachary A. Kemmerer; Deniz Aydin; Adam Jochem; Molly T. McDevitt; Paul D. Hutchins; Emily M. Wilkerson; Jaime L. Stark; Jonathan A. Stefely; Isabel Johnson; Craig A. Bingman; John L. Markley; Joshua J. Coon; Matteo Dal Peraro; David J. Pagliarini

Human COQ8A (ADCK3) and Saccharomyces cerevisiae Coq8p (collectively COQ8) are UbiB family proteins essential for mitochondrial coenzyme Q (CoQ) biosynthesis. However, the biochemical activity of COQ8 and its direct role in CoQ production remain unclear, in part due to lack of known endogenous regulators of COQ8 function and of effective small molecules for probing its activity in vivo. Here we demonstrate that COQ8 possesses evolutionarily conserved ATPase activity that is activated by binding to membranes containing cardiolipin and by phenolic compounds that resemble CoQ pathway intermediates. We further create an analog-sensitive version of Coq8p and reveal that acute chemical inhibition of its endogenous activity in yeast is sufficient to cause respiratory deficiency concomitant with CoQ depletion. Collectively, this work defines lipid and small molecule modulators of an ancient family of atypical kinase-like proteins and establishes a chemical genetic system for further exploring the mechanistic role of COQ8 in CoQ biosynthesis.


Cell systems | 2018

LipiDex: An Integrated Software Package for High-Confidence Lipid Identification

Paul D. Hutchins; Jason D. Russell; Joshua J. Coon

State-of-the-art proteomics software routinely quantifies thousands of peptides per experiment with minimal need for manual validation or processing of data. For the emerging field of discovery lipidomics via liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), comparably mature informatics tools do not exist. Here, we introduce LipiDex, a freely available software suite that unifies and automates all stages of lipid identification, reducing hands-on processing time from hours to minutes for even the most expansive datasets. LipiDex utilizes flexible in silico fragmentation templates and lipid-optimized MS/MS spectral matching routines to confidently identify and track hundreds of lipid species and unknown compounds from diverse sample matrices. Unique spectral and chromatographic peak purity algorithms accurately quantify co-isolation and co-elution of isobaric lipids, generating identifications that match the structural resolution afforded by the LC-MS/MS experiment. During final data filtering, ionization artifacts are removed to significantly reduce dataset redundancy. LipiDex interfaces with several LC-MS/MS software packages, enabling robust lipid identification to be readily incorporated into pre-existing data workflows.


Molecular Cell | 2017

Multi-omic Mitoprotease Profiling Defines a Role for Oct1p in Coenzyme Q Production

Mike T. Veling; Andrew G. Reidenbach; Elyse C. Freiberger; Nicholas W. Kwiecien; Paul D. Hutchins; Michael J. Drahnak; Adam Jochem; Arne Ulbrich; Matthew J. P. Rush; Jason D. Russell; Joshua J. Coon; David J. Pagliarini


Chemistry & Biology | 2017

Conserved Lipid and Small-Molecule Modulation of COQ8 Reveals Regulation of the Ancient Kinase-like UbiB Family

Andrew G. Reidenbach; Zachary A. Kemmerer; Deniz Aydin; Adam Jochem; Molly T. McDevitt; Paul D. Hutchins; Jaime L. Stark; Jonathan A. Stefely; Thiru Reddy; Alexander S. Hebert; Emily M. Wilkerson; Isabel Johnson; Craig A. Bingman; John L. Markley; Joshua J. Coon; Matteo Dal Peraro; David J. Pagliarini


Cell systems | 2017

Multi-omics Reveal Specific Targets of the RNA-Binding Protein Puf3p and Its Orchestration of Mitochondrial Biogenesis

Christopher P. Lapointe; Jonathan A. Stefely; Adam Jochem; Paul D. Hutchins; Gary M. Wilson; Nicholas W. Kwiecien; Joshua J. Coon; Marvin Wickens; David J. Pagliarini

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Joshua J. Coon

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jonathan A. Stefely

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Matthew J. P. Rush

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jason D. Russell

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Nicholas W. Kwiecien

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Arne Ulbrich

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jaime L. Stark

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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John L. Markley

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Zachary A. Kemmerer

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Alexander S. Hebert

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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