Abstract Mitochondrial proteases regulate dynamic properties of organelle morphology and ensure functional plasticity at the cellular level. The metalloprotease OMA1 mediates constitutive and stress-inducible processing of its mitochondrial substrates, although only a few of its direct functional targets have been characterized. Using in vitro and in vivo multiproteomic and biochemical approaches, we here demonstrate that the membrane-anchored intermembrane space (IMS) protein AIFM1 serves as a mitochondrial stress-responsive OMA1 substrate. Under stress conditions, OMA1 cleaves AIFM1 in the IMS with slower kinetics than its conventional substrate, the dynamin-like GTPase OPA1. OMA1-mediated dislocation of cleaved AIFM1 from the mitochondrial inner membrane reduces its interaction with oxidative phosphorylation subunits, thereby decreasing respiratory activity and impairing cell growth. Furthermore, we reveal that under steady-state conditions AIFM1 broadly safeguards the mitochondrial proteome by mediating the import of proteins, particularly respiratory complex I subunits, via the TIM23 complex. Similar changes to the mitochondrial proteome occur in the lungs of virally infected mice, accompanied by stress-inducible AIFM1 processing. These findings identify OMA1 as a key integrator of mitochondrial stress and cellular energetics through AIFM1 remodeling.
Nishigori et al. (Tue,) studied this question.