- Rardin, Matthew J;
- He, Wenjuan;
- Nishida, Yuya;
- Newman, John C;
- Carrico, Chris;
- Danielson, Steven R;
- Guo, Ailan;
- Gut, Philipp;
- Sahu, Alexandria K;
- Li, Biao;
- Uppala, Radha;
- Fitch, Mark;
- Riiff, Timothy;
- Zhu, Lei;
- Zhou, Jing;
- Mulhern, Daniel;
- Stevens, Robert D;
- Ilkayeva, Olga R;
- Newgard, Christopher B;
- Jacobson, Matthew P;
- Hellerstein, Marc;
- Goetzman, Eric S;
- Gibson, Bradford W;
- Verdin, Eric
Reversible posttranslational modifications are emerging as critical regulators of mitochondrial proteins and metabolism. Here, we use a label-free quantitative proteomic approach to characterize the lysine succinylome in liver mitochondria and its regulation by the desuccinylase SIRT5. A total of 1,190 unique sites were identified as succinylated, and 386 sites across 140 proteins representing several metabolic pathways including β-oxidation and ketogenesis were significantly hypersuccinylated in Sirt5(-/-) animals. Loss of SIRT5 leads to accumulation of medium- and long-chain acylcarnitines and decreased β-hydroxybutyrate production in vivo. In addition, we demonstrate that SIRT5 regulates succinylation of the rate-limiting ketogenic enzyme 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA synthase 2 (HMGCS2) both in vivo and in vitro. Finally, mutation of hypersuccinylated residues K83 and K310 on HMGCS2 to glutamic acid strongly inhibits enzymatic activity. Taken together, these findings establish SIRT5 as a global regulator of lysine succinylation in mitochondria and present a mechanism for inhibition of ketogenesis through HMGCS2.