Ultrastructural and proteomic profiling of mitochondria-associated endoplasmic reticulum membranes reveal aging signatures in striated muscle

Xue Lü(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital), Yingchao Gong(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital), Wan Yu Hu(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital), Yankai Mao(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital), Ting Wang(Hangzhou Medical College), Zeyu Sun(State Key Laboratory of Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases), Xiaoling Su(State Key Laboratory of Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases), Guosheng Fu(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital), Yanpeng Wang(Zhejiang Provincial People's Hospital), Dongwu Lai(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital)
Cell Death and Disease
April 2, 2022
Cited by 59Open Access
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Abstract

Aging is a major risk for developing cardiac and skeletal muscle dysfunction, yet the underlying mechanism remains elusive. Here we demonstrated that the mitochondria-associated endoplasmic reticulum membranes (MAMs) in the rat heart and skeletal muscle were disrupted during aging. Using quantitative morphological analysis, we showed that the mitochondria-endoplasmic reticulum contacts (MERCs) were reduced by half over the lifespan with an early onset of accelerated thickening in the clefts. The ultrastructural changes were further validated by proteomic profiling of the MAM fractions. A combination of subcellular fractionation and quantitative mass spectrometry identified 1306 MAM-enriched proteins in both heart and skeletal muscle, with a catalog of proteins dysregulated with aging. Functional mapping of the MAM proteome suggested several aging signatures to be closely associated with the ER-mitochondria crosstalk, including local metabolic rewiring, calcium homeostasis imbalance, and impaired organelle dynamics and autophagy. Moreover, we identified a subset of highly interconnected proteins in an ER-mitochondria organization network, which were consistently down-regulated with aging. These decreased proteins, including VDAC1, SAMM50, MTX1 and MIC60, were considered as potential contributors to the age-related MAM dysfunction. This study highlights the perturbation in MAM integrity during the striated muscle aging process, and provides a framework for understanding aging biology from the perspective of organelle interactions.


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