4.8 Article

Mfn2 deficiency links age-related sarcopenia and impaired autophagy to activation of an adaptive mitophagy pathway

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 35, Issue 15, Pages 1677-1693

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embj.201593084

Keywords

aging; autophagy; mitochondria; mitophagy; sarcopenia

Funding

  1. FPI fellowship from Ministerio de Educacion y Cultura, Spain
  2. MINECO [SAF2013-40987R]
  3. Generalitat de Catalunya [2014SGR48]
  4. CIBERDEM (Instituto de Salud Carlos III)
  5. INTERREG IV-B-SUDOE-FEDER (DIOMED) [SOE1/P1/E178]
  6. ISCIII [PI13/02512]
  7. FEDER
  8. Maria de Maeztu Programme for Units of Excellence in RD [MDM-2014-0370]
  9. AFM
  10. Fundacio Marato TV3
  11. CIBERNED
  12. ICREA Academia (Generalitat de Catalunya)
  13. Severo Ochoa Award of Excellence from MINECO (Government of Spain)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Mitochondrial dysfunction and accumulation of damaged mitochondria are considered major contributors to aging. However, the molecular mechanisms responsible for these mitochondrial alterations remain unknown. Here, we demonstrate that mitofusin 2 (Mfn2) plays a key role in the control of muscle mitochondrial damage. We show that aging is characterized by a progressive reduction in Mfn2 in mouse skeletal muscle and that skeletal muscle Mfn2 ablation in mice generates a gene signature linked to aging. Furthermore, analysis of muscle Mfn2-deficient mice revealed that aging-induced Mfn2 decrease underlies the age-related alterations in metabolic homeostasis and sarcopenia. Mfn2 deficiency reduced autophagy and impaired mitochondrial quality, which contributed to an exacerbated age-related mitochondrial dysfunction. Interestingly, aging-induced Mfn2 deficiency triggers a ROS-dependent adaptive signaling pathway through induction of HIF1 alpha transcription factor and BNIP3. This pathway compensates for the loss of mitochondrial autophagy and minimizes mitochondrial damage. Our findings reveal that Mfn2 repression in muscle during aging is a determinant for the inhibition of mitophagy and accumulation of damaged mitochondria and triggers the induction of a mitochondrial quality control pathway.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available