Publication date: Available online 26 October 2017
Source:Cell Metabolism
Author(s): Moshi Song, Antonietta Franco, Julie A. Fleischer, Lihong Zhang, Gerald W. Dorn
Mitochondrial fusion and fission are critical to heart health; genetically interrupting either is rapidly lethal. To understand whether it is loss of, or the imbalance between, fusion and fission that underlies observed cardiac phenotypes, we engineered mice in which Mfn-mediated fusion and Drp1-mediated fission could be concomitantly abolished. Compared to fusion-defective Mfn1/Mfn2 cardiac knockout or fission-defective Drp1 cardiac knockout mice, Mfn1/Mfn2/Drp1 cardiac triple-knockout mice survived longer and manifested a unique pathological form of cardiac hypertrophy. Over time, however, combined abrogation of fission and fusion provoked massive progressive mitochondrial accumulation that severely distorted cardiomyocyte sarcomeric architecture. Mitochondrial biogenesis was not responsible for mitochondrial superabundance, whereas mitophagy was suppressed despite impaired mitochondrial proteostasis. Similar but milder defects were observed in aged hearts. Thus, cardiomyopathies linked to dynamic imbalance between fission and fusion are temporarily mitigated by forced mitochondrial adynamism at the cost of compromising mitochondrial quantity control and accelerating mitochondrial senescence.
Graphical abstract
Teaser
Mitochondrial dynamism and mitophagy maintain mitochondrial fitness. The impact of fission/fusion activity versus balance is unknown. Song et al. reported that mice with hearts with adynamic mitochondria live longer than fission- or fusion-defective parents, but develop mitochondrial senescence and heart failure from defective mitophagy, mitochondrial superabundance, and distorted sarcomeric architecture.http://ift.tt/2yRm7Qp
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