Differential mitochondrial roles for α-synuclein in DRP1-dependent fission and PINK1/Parkin-mediated oxidation

被引:0
|
作者
Thomas J. Krzystek
Rupkatha Banerjee
Layne Thurston
JianQiao Huang
Kelsey Swinter
Saad Navid Rahman
Tomas L. Falzone
Shermali Gunawardena
机构
[1] The State University of New York at Buffalo,Department of Biological Sciences
[2] Universidad De Buenos Aires,Instituto de Biología Celular y Neurociencias IBCN (CONICET
[3] Instituto de Investigación en Biomedicina de Buenos Aires (IBioBA),UBA)
[4] Partner Institute of the Max Planck Society,undefined
来源
Cell Death & Disease | / 12卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mitochondria are highly dynamic organelles with strict quality control processes that maintain cellular homeostasis. Within axons, coordinated cycles of fission-fusion mediated by dynamin related GTPase protein (DRP1) and mitofusins (MFN), together with regulated motility of healthy mitochondria anterogradely and damaged/oxidized mitochondria retrogradely, control mitochondrial shape, distribution and size. Disruption of this tight regulation has been linked to aberrant oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction causing mitochondrial disease and neurodegeneration. Although pharmacological induction of Parkinson’s disease (PD) in humans/animals with toxins or in mice overexpressing α-synuclein (α-syn) exhibited mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress, mice lacking α-syn showed resistance to mitochondrial toxins; yet, how α-syn influences mitochondrial dynamics and turnover is unclear. Here, we isolate the mechanistic role of α-syn in mitochondrial homeostasis in vivo in a humanized Drosophila model of Parkinson’s disease (PD). We show that excess α-syn causes fragmented mitochondria, which persists with either truncation of the C-terminus (α-syn1–120) or deletion of the NAC region (α-synΔNAC). Using in vivo oxidation reporters Mito-roGFP2-ORP1/GRX1 and MitoTimer, we found that α-syn-mediated fragments were oxidized/damaged, but α-syn1–120-induced fragments were healthy, suggesting that the C-terminus is required for oxidation. α-syn-mediated oxidized fragments showed biased retrograde motility, but α-syn1–120-mediated healthy fragments did not, demonstrating that the C-terminus likely mediates the retrograde motility of oxidized mitochondria. Depletion/inhibition or excess DRP1-rescued α-syn-mediated fragmentation, oxidation, and the biased retrograde motility, indicating that DRP1-mediated fragmentation is likely upstream of oxidation and motility changes. Further, excess PINK/Parkin, two PD-associated proteins that function to coordinate mitochondrial turnover via induction of selective mitophagy, rescued α-syn-mediated membrane depolarization, oxidation and cell death in a C-terminus-dependent manner, suggesting a functional interaction between α-syn and PINK/Parkin. Taken together, our findings identify distinct roles for α-syn in mitochondrial homeostasis, highlighting a previously unknown pathogenic pathway for the initiation of PD.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Phthalate induces mitochondrial injury in cerebellum through Sirt1-PGC-1? and PINK1/Parkin-mediated signal pathways
    Cui, Ling-Ge
    Liu, Lin
    Li, Mu-Zi
    Zhu, Yu
    Ma, Xiang-Yu
    Li, Xue-Nan
    Li, Jin-Long
    LIFE SCIENCES, 2023, 316
  • [42] PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy in cardiovascular disease: From pathogenesis to novel therapy
    Wu, Yanze
    Jiang, Ting
    Hua, Jinghai
    Xiong, Zhiping
    Dai, Kai
    Chen, Hui
    Li, Lei
    Peng, Jingtian
    Peng, Xiaoping
    Zheng, Zeqi
    Xiong, Wenjun
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 2022, 361 : 61 - 69
  • [43] PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy enhances the survival of Staphylococcus aureus in bovine macrophages
    Zhou, Xi
    Liu, Kangjun
    Li, Jianji
    Cui, Luying
    Dong, Junsheng
    Li, Jun
    Meng, Xia
    Zhu, Guoqiang
    Wang, Heng
    JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE, 2023, 27 (03) : 412 - 421
  • [44] PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy in mechanical ventilation-induced diaphragmatic dysfunction
    Yong, Hui
    Zhou, Yun
    Ye, Wanlin
    Li, Tianmei
    Wu, Gangming
    Chen, Jingyuan
    Liu, Li
    Wei, Jicheng
    THERAPEUTIC ADVANCES IN RESPIRATORY DISEASE, 2021, 15
  • [45] PINK1/PARKIN AND MITOCHONDRIAL DYNAMICS IN NEURODEGENERATION
    Guo, Ming
    FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2017, 112 : 16 - 16
  • [46] Structural Mechanisms of Mitochondrial Quality Control Mediated by PINK1 and Parkin
    Trempe, Jean-Francois
    Gehring, Kalle
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2023, 435 (12)
  • [47] Mitochondrial Quality Control Mediated by PINK1 and Parkin: Links to Parkinsonism
    Narendra, Derek
    Walker, John E.
    Youle, Richard
    COLD SPRING HARBOR PERSPECTIVES IN BIOLOGY, 2012, 4 (11):
  • [48] Involvement of PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy in AGE-induced cardiomyocyte aging
    Zha, Zhimin
    Wang, Junhong
    Wang, Xiangming
    Lu, Miao
    Guo, Yan
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 2017, 227 : 201 - 208
  • [49] Manganese induces S-nitrosylation of PINK1 leading to nerve cell damage by repressing PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy
    Liu, Kuan
    Liu, Zhiqi
    Liu, Zhuofan
    Ma, Zhuo
    Deng, Yu
    Liu, Wei
    Xu, Bin
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 834
  • [50] NDP52 acts as a redox sensor in PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy
    Kataura, Tetsushi
    Otten, Elsje G.
    Rabanal-Ruiz, Yoana
    Adriaenssens, Elias
    Urselli, Francesca
    Scialo, Filippo
    Fan, Lanyu
    Smith, Graham R.
    Dawson, William M.
    Chen, Xingxiang
    Yue, Wyatt W.
    Bronowska, Agnieszka K.
    Carroll, Bernadette
    Martens, Sascha
    Lazarou, Michael
    Korolchuk, Viktor, I
    EMBO JOURNAL, 2023, 42 (05)