4.5 Article

Appoptosin interacts with mitochondrial outer-membrane fusion proteins and regulates mitochondrial morphology

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 129, Issue 5, Pages 994-1002

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.176792

Keywords

Appoptosin; Apoptosis; Mitochondrial dynamics; MFN1; MFN2; MITOL

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81225008, 81161120496, 91332112, 91332114, U1405222]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health China-Canada Alzheimer's disease Initiative [TAD-117950]
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01AG021173, R01AG038710, R01AG044420, R01NS046673]
  4. Fujian Provincial Department of Science and Technology [2015Y4008]
  5. Xiamen University President Fund [20720150170]

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Mitochondrial morphology is regulated by fusion and fission machinery. Impaired mitochondria dynamics cause various diseases, including Alzheimer's disease. Appoptosin (encoded by SLC25A38) is a mitochondrial carrier protein that is located in the mitochondrial inner membrane. Appoptosin overexpression causes overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and caspase-dependent apoptosis, whereas appoptosin downregulation abolishes beta-amyloid-induced mitochondrial fragmentation and neuronal death during Alzheimer's disease. Herein, we found that overexpression of appoptosin resulted in mitochondrial fragmentation in a manner independent of its carrier function, ROS production or caspase activation. Although appoptosin did not affect levels of mitochondrial outer-membrane fusion (MFN1 and MFN2), inner-membrane fusion (OPA1) and fission [DRP1 (also known as DNM1L) and FIS1] proteins, appoptosin interacted with MFN1 and MFN2, as well as with the mitochondrial ubiquitin ligase MITOL (also known as MARCH5) but not OPA1, FIS1 or DRP1. Appoptosin overexpression impaired the interaction between MFN1 and MFN2, and mitochondrial fusion. By contrast, co-expression of MFN1, MITOL and a dominant-negative form of DRP1, DRP1K38A, partially rescued appoptosin-induced mitochondrial fragmentation and apoptosis, whereas co-expression of FIS1 aggravated appoptosin-induced apoptosis. Together, our results demonstrate that appoptosin can interact with mitochondrial outer-membrane fusion proteins and regulates mitochondrial morphology.

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