<scp>3D</scp> reconstruction of murine mitochondria reveals changes in structure during aging linked to the <scp>MICOS</scp> complex

Zer Vue(Vanderbilt University), Edgar Garza-López(University of Iowa), Kit Neikirk(Vanderbilt University), Prasanna Katti(National Institutes of Health), Larry Vang(Vanderbilt University), Heather K. Beasley(Vanderbilt University), Jianqiang Shao(University of Iowa), Andrea G. Marshall(Vanderbilt University), Amber Crabtree(Vanderbilt University), Alexandria C. Murphy(Pennsylvania State University), Brenita C. Jenkins(Pennsylvania State University), Praveena Prasad(Pennsylvania State University), Chantell S. Evans(Duke University), Brittany Taylor(University of Florida), Margaret Mungai(Vanderbilt University), Mason Killion(Vanderbilt University), Dominique C. Stephens(Vanderbilt University), Trace Christensen(Mayo Clinic), Jacob Lam(University of Iowa), Blanca Rodríguez(University of Iowa), Mark Phillips(Oregon State University), Nastaran Daneshgar(Oregon State University), Ho‐Jin Koh(Tennessee State University), Alice Koh(Vanderbilt University), Jamaine Davis(Meharry Medical College), Nina Garcia Devine(Oregon State University), Mohammad Saleem(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Estêvão Scudese(Universidade Católica de Petrópolis), Kenneth R. Arnold(University of California, Irvine), Valeria Vanessa Chavarin(University of California, Irvine), Ryan Daniel Robinson(University of California, Irvine), Moumita Chakraborty(Oregon State University), Jennifer A. Gaddy(Vanderbilt University), Mariya T. Sweetwyne(University of Washington), Genesis Wilson(Vanderbilt University), Elma Zaganjor(Vanderbilt University), James Kezos(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), Cristiana Dondi(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), Anilkumar K. Reddy(Baylor College of Medicine), Brian Glancy(National Institutes of Health), Annet Kirabo(Vanderbilt University), Anita M. Quintana(The University of Texas at El Paso), Dao‐Fu Dai(Johns Hopkins University), Karen Ocorr(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), Sandra Murray(University of Pittsburgh), Steven M. Damo(Vanderbilt University), Vernat Exil(University of Iowa), Blake Riggs(San Francisco State University), Bret C. Mobley(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), José A. Gómez(Vanderbilt University), Melanie R. McReynolds(Pennsylvania State University), Antentor Hinton(Vanderbilt University)
Aging Cell
November 13, 2023
Cited by 62Open Access
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Abstract

During aging, muscle gradually undergoes sarcopenia, the loss of function associated with loss of mass, strength, endurance, and oxidative capacity. However, the 3D structural alterations of mitochondria associated with aging in skeletal muscle and cardiac tissues are not well described. Although mitochondrial aging is associated with decreased mitochondrial capacity, the genes responsible for the morphological changes in mitochondria during aging are poorly characterized. We measured changes in mitochondrial morphology in aged murine gastrocnemius, soleus, and cardiac tissues using serial block-face scanning electron microscopy and 3D reconstructions. We also used reverse transcriptase-quantitative PCR, transmission electron microscopy quantification, Seahorse analysis, and metabolomics and lipidomics to measure changes in mitochondrial morphology and function after loss of mitochondria contact site and cristae organizing system (MICOS) complex genes, Chchd3, Chchd6, and Mitofilin. We identified significant changes in mitochondrial size in aged murine gastrocnemius, soleus, and cardiac tissues. We found that both age-related loss of the MICOS complex and knockouts of MICOS genes in mice altered mitochondrial morphology. Given the critical role of mitochondria in maintaining cellular metabolism, we characterized the metabolomes and lipidomes of young and aged mouse tissues, which showed profound alterations consistent with changes in membrane integrity, supporting our observations of age-related changes in muscle tissues. We found a relationship between changes in the MICOS complex and aging. Thus, it is important to understand the mechanisms that underlie the tissue-dependent 3D mitochondrial phenotypic changes that occur in aging and the evolutionary conservation of these mechanisms between Drosophila and mammals.


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