Regulation of ER-mitochondria contacts by Parkin via Mfn2

Valentina Basso(University of Padua), Elena Marchesan(Ospedale generale di zona San Camillo Treviso), Caterina Peggion(University of Padua), Joy Chakraborty(Ospedale generale di zona San Camillo Treviso), Sophia von Stockum(Ospedale generale di zona San Camillo Treviso), Marta Giacomello(University of Padua), Denis Ottolini(University of Padua), Valentina Debattisti(Thomas Jefferson University), Federico Caicci(University of Padua), Elisabetta Tasca(Ospedale generale di zona San Camillo Treviso), Valentina Pegoraro(Ospedale generale di zona San Camillo Treviso), C. Angelini(Ospedale generale di zona San Camillo Treviso), Angelo Antonini(University of Padua), Alessandro Bertoli(University of Padua), Marisa Brini(University of Padua), Elena Ziviani(Ospedale generale di zona San Camillo Treviso)
Pharmacological Research
September 13, 2018
Cited by 209Open Access
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Abstract

Parkin, an E3 ubiquitin ligase and a Parkinson’s disease (PD) related gene, translocates to impaired mitochondria and drives their elimination via autophagy, a process known as mitophagy. Mitochondrial pro-fusion protein Mitofusins (Mfn1 and Mfn2) were found to be a target for Parkin mediated ubiquitination. Mfns are transmembrane GTPase embedded in the outer membrane of mitochondria, which are required on adjacent mitochondria to mediate fusion. In mammals, Mfn2 also forms complexes that are capable of tethering mitochondria to endoplasmic reticulum (ER), a structural feature essential for mitochondrial energy metabolism, calcium (Ca2+) transfer between the organelles and Ca2+ dependent cell death. Despite its fundamental physiological role, the molecular mechanisms that control ER-mitochondria cross talk are obscure. Ubiquitination has recently emerged as a powerful tool to modulate protein function, via regulation of protein subcellular localization and protein ability to interact with other proteins. Ubiquitination is also a reversible mechanism, which can be actively controlled by opposing ubiquitination-deubiquitination events. In this work we found that in Parkin deficient cells and parkin mutant human fibroblasts, the tether between ER and mitochondria is decreased. We identified the site of Parkin dependent ubiquitination and showed that the non-ubiquitinatable Mfn2 mutant fails to restore ER-mitochondria physical and functional interaction. Finally, we took advantage of an established in vivo model of PD to demonstrate that manipulation of ER-mitochondria tethering by expressing an ER-mitochondria synthetic linker is sufficient to rescue the locomotor deficit associated to an in vivo Drosophila model of PD.


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