4.7 Article

SUMOylation of mitofusins: A potential mechanism for perinuclear mitochondrial congression in cells treated with mitochondrial stressors

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2021.166104

Keywords

Mitochondria; Mitophagy; Mitofusin; Small ubiquitin modifier (SUMO); Ubiquitin; 26S proteasome; Autophagy

Funding

  1. NIH/NINDS [R21NS060960]

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In cells treated with mitochondrial stressors, SUMOylation of Mfn1/2 facilitates the aggregation of damaged mitochondria at the perinuclear region, potentially through acting as a molecular glue to interact with other proteins.
Depolarized/damaged mitochondria aggregate at the perinuclear region prior to mitophagy in cells treated with mitochondrial stressors. However, the cellular mechanism(s) by which damaged mitochondria are transported and remain aggregated at the perinuclear region is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that mitofusins (Mfn1/2) are post-translationally modified by SUMO2 (Small Ubiquitin-related Modifier 2) in Human embryonic kidney 293 (Hek293) cells treated with protonophore CCCP and proteasome inhibitor MG132, both known mitochondrial stressors. SUMOylation of Mfn1/2 is not for their proteasomal degradation but facilitate mitochondrial congression at the perinuclear region in CCCP- and MG132-treated cells. Additionally, congressed mitochondria (mito-aggresomes) colocalize with LC3, ubiquitin, and SUMO2 in CCCP-treated cells. Knowing that SUMO functions as a molecular glue to facilitate protein-protein interactions, we propose that SUMOylation of Mfn1/2 may congress, glues, and confines damaged mitochondria to the perinuclear region thereby, protectively quarantining them from the heathy mitochondrial network until their removal via mitophagy in cells.

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