4.6 Article

Dynamin-related protein 1 regulates substrate oxidation in skeletal muscle by stabilizing cellular and mitochondrial calcium dynamics

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 297, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101196

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Funding

  1. United States National Institutes of Health [P20 GM135002, P20 GM103528, P30 DK072476, U54 GM104940, R01 DK108089, R01 DK103860, R01 DK108765, R01 DK115749]

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The study reveals that DRP1 regulates substrate oxidation by altering whole-cell and mitochondrial calcium dynamics.
Mitochondria undergo continuous cycles of fission and fusion to promote inheritance, regulate quality control, and mitigate organelle stress. More recently, this process of mitochondrial dy-namics has been demonstrated to be highly sensitive to nutrient supply, ultimately conferring bioenergetic plasticity to the organ-elle. However, whether regulators of mitochondrial dynamics play a causative role in nutrient regulation remains unclear. In this study, we generated a cellular loss-of-function model for dynamin-related protein 1 (DRP1), the primary regulator of outer membrane mitochondrial fission. Loss of DRP1 (shDRP1) resulted in exten-sive ultrastructural and functional remodeling of mitochondria, characterized by pleomorphic enlargement, increased electron density of the matrix, and defective NADH and succinate oxida-tion. Despite increased mitochondrial size and volume, shDRP1 cells exhibited reduced cellular glucose uptake and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation. Untargeted transcriptomic profiling revealed severe downregulation of genes required for cellular and mito-chondrial calcium homeostasis, which was coupled to loss of ATP-stimulated calcium flux and impaired substrate oxidation stimulated by exogenous calcium. The insights obtained herein suggest that DRP1 regulates substrate oxidation by altering whole-cell and mitochondrial calcium dynamics. These findings are relevant to the targetability of mitochondrial fission and have clinical relevance in the identification of treatments for fission-related pathologies such as hereditary neuropathies, inborn errors in metabolism, cancer, and chronic diseases.

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