4.6 Article

Proteasomes Associated with the Blm10 Activator Protein Antagonize Mitochondrial Fission through Degradation of the Fission Protein Dnm1

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 17, Pages 12145-12156

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.554105

Keywords

Mitochondria; Oxidative Stress; Proteasome; Protein Degradation; Respiration

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 GM084228, R37 GM43601, R01 GM65592]

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Background: Blm10 binds to the proteasome core particle and stimulates its proteolytic activity. Results: Loss of BLM10 results in impaired respiration, elevated oxidative stress sensitivity, increased mitochondrial fission, and stabilization of the fission protein Dnm1. Conclusion: Blm10 proteasome-mediated Dnm1 degradation is a regulatory mechanism to maintain correct mitochondrial function. Significance: Blm10 is involved in mitochondrial quality control under oxidative stress. The conserved Blm10/PA200 activators bind to the proteasome core particle gate and facilitate turnover of peptides and unfolded proteins in vitro. We report here that Blm10 is required for the maintenance of functional mitochondria. BLM10 expression is induced 25-fold upon a switch from fermentation to oxidative metabolism. In the absence of BLM10, Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells exhibit a temperature-sensitive growth defect under oxidative growth conditions and produce colonies with dysfunctional mitochondria at high frequency. Loss of BLM10 leads to reduced respiratory capacity, increased mitochondrial oxidative damage, and reduced viability in the presence of oxidative stress or death stimuli. In the absence of BLM10, increased fragmentation of the mitochondrial network under oxidative stress is observed indicative of elevated activity of the mitochondrial fission machinery. The degradation of Dnm1, the main factor mediating mitochondrial fission, is impaired in the absence of BLM10 in vitro and in vivo. These data suggest that the mitochondrial functional and morphological changes observed are related to elevated Dnm1 levels. This hypothesis is supported by the finding that cells that constitutively overexpress DNM1 display the same mitochondrial defects as blm10 cells. The data are consistent with a model in which Blm10 proteasome-mediated turnover of Dnm1 is required for the maintenance of mitochondrial function and provides cytoprotection under conditions that induce increased mitochondrial damage and programmed cell death.

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