4.8 Article

Mitochondrial DNA and TLR9 drive muscle inflammation upon Opa1 deficiency

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 37, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embj.201796553

Keywords

endosome; mitochondrial dynamics; muscle disease; systemic inflammation

Funding

  1. FPI fellowship from the Ministerio de Educacion y Cultura, Spain
  2. MINECO [SAF2013-40987R, SAF2016-75246R]
  3. Generalitat de Catalunya [2014SGR48]
  4. CIBERDEM grant from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III [PIE14/00045]
  5. INFLAMES grant from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III [PIE14/00045]
  6. grant Todos somos raros, todos somos unicos from Fundacion Isabel Gemio
  7. INTERREG IV-B-SUDOE-FEDER (DIOMED) [SOE1/P1/E178]
  8. ICREA Academia (Generalitat de Catalunya)
  9. Severo Ochoa Award of Excellence from MINECO (Government of Spain)

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Opa1 participates in inner mitochondrial membrane fusion and cristae morphogenesis. Here, we show that muscle-specific Opa1 ablation causes reduced muscle fiber size, dysfunctional mitochondria, enhanced Fgf21, and muscle inflammation characterized by NF-B activation, and enhanced expression of pro-inflammatory genes. Chronic sodium salicylate treatment ameliorated muscle alterations and reduced the muscle expression of Fgf21. Muscle inflammation was an early event during the progression of the disease and occurred before macrophage infiltration, indicating that it is a primary response to Opa1 deficiency. Moreover, Opa1 repression in muscle cells also resulted in NF-B activation and inflammation in the absence of necrosis and/or apoptosis, thereby revealing that the activation is a cell-autonomous process and independent of cell death. The effects of Opa1 deficiency on the expression NF-B target genes and inflammation were absent upon mitochondrial DNA depletion. Under Opa1 deficiency, blockage or repression of TLR9 prevented NF-B activation and inflammation. Taken together, our results reveal that Opa1 deficiency in muscle causes initial mitochondrial alterations that lead to TLR9 activation, and inflammation, which contributes to enhanced Fgf21 expression and to growth impairment.

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