线粒体来源的囊泡:心脏线粒体质量控制的新参与者

L. Bozi, Luiz R G Bechara, A. F. dos Santos, Juliane C Campos
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This mitochondrial quality control machinery works in different levels of surveillance: (1) the antioxidant enzymes protect the organelle against oxygen-mediated toxicity, (2) the ubiquitin–proteasome system as well as the mitochondrial proteases and chaperones ensure the proteostasis by refolding or degrading damaged mitochondrial proteins, and (3) the interconnected processes of mitochondrial dynamics (fusion and fission) and mitophagy controls mitochondrial size, shape and clearance (Sugiura et al. 2014). More recently, a study by Cadete et al. (2016) published in The Journal of Physiology provides evidence that mitochondrial-derived vesicles (MDVs) are also involved in the maintenance of cardiac mitochondrial homeostasis. Although the results are associative, the well-conducted experiments complemented by the relevant findings make this work attractive, opening a new field of investigation in cardiac mitochondrial physiology. 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MDVs were identified by their apparent size and selective enrichment for mitochondrial markers from both matrix (PDH – pyruvate dehydrogenase) and outer membrane (TOM20 – translocase of the outer membrane) at baseline. A further increase in MDVs along with a hyperfused mitochondrial network was detected upon mild oxidative stress. Under severe oxidative stress myoblasts accumulated both PDH-enriched vesicles and fragmented mitochondria. Using another stress condition, authors demonstrated that doxorubicin-induced stress increased MDV formation within 30 min without affecting mitochondrial morphology and bioenergetics in myoblasts. Interestingly, PDH and TOM20-enriched vesicles gradually declined in the following 6 h, while the mitochondrial network became fragmented. Therefore, the authors suggest that MDV formation (1) occurs in cardiac cells, (2) is responsive to specific mitochondrial stress conditions and (3) precedes mitochondrial dysfunction. Despite H9C2 myoblasts having been widely studied as a cardiac cell line, they are phenotypically and metabolically different from cardiomyocytes. In order to verify whether MDV formation occurs in cardiomyocyte-like cells, H9C2 cells undergoing differentiation were analysed. At baseline, a 3-fold increase in both PDHand TOM20-enriched vesicles were detected in differentiated H9C2 cells compared to myoblasts. Moreover, differentiated cells increased MDVs upon mitochondrial stress. This scenario can be explained, at least in part, by the shift from glycolytic to oxidative metabolism along with an increasing number of mitochondria that occurs during cellular differentiation. Similarly, Soubannier et al. (2012) showed that elevated mitochondrial metabolism increases MDV transit to the lysosome upon stress in HeLa cells. In a second arm of the study, the authors used ultrastructural analysis to determine the physiological relevance of MDV formation in vivo. 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It is worth mentioning that their innovative approach of switching the cell energy substrate from glucose to galactose, in order to stimulate the mitochondrial metabolism, helped the authors to identify MDVs under normal conditions. MDVs were identified by their apparent size and selective enrichment for mitochondrial markers from both matrix (PDH – pyruvate dehydrogenase) and outer membrane (TOM20 – translocase of the outer membrane) at baseline. A further increase in MDVs along with a hyperfused mitochondrial network was detected upon mild oxidative stress. Under severe oxidative stress myoblasts accumulated both PDH-enriched vesicles and fragmented mitochondria. Using another stress condition, authors demonstrated that doxorubicin-induced stress increased MDV formation within 30 min without affecting mitochondrial morphology and bioenergetics in myoblasts. 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引用次数: 5

摘要

有趣的是,与mdv相比,阿霉素处理的小鼠心脏中含有线粒体的自噬体数量更少,而对照组小鼠心脏中没有发现自噬体。基于这些发现,作者认为MDVs是心脏细胞中一个活跃的、生理相关的线粒体质量控制元件。MDV形成、运输和传递到溶酶体的机制仍然知之甚少。因此,MDVs的生理作用难以确定。有两个证据支持作者关于线粒体质量控制系统中MDV转运到溶酶体的说法。首先,MDV蛋白货物根据线粒体应激的性质被选择性地结合。例如,全局细胞氧化应激诱导携带线粒体外膜蛋白的MDVs。另一方面,细胞器内的氧化应激导致mdv携带线粒体复合体III亚基(Sugiura et al. 2014)。第二个证据是MDV转运到溶酶体需要有丝分裂相关
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mitochondrial‐derived vesicles: a new player in cardiac mitochondrial quality control
Mitochondria are critical organelles involved in adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthesis, reactive oxygen species generation, ion homeostasis, aldehyde metabolism and programmed cell death. Loss of mitochondrial integrity is sufficient to establish pathological conditions such as cardiovascular diseases. In an attempt to ensure the maintenance of mitochondrial functionality, eukaryotic cells developed an integrated quality control system. This mitochondrial quality control machinery works in different levels of surveillance: (1) the antioxidant enzymes protect the organelle against oxygen-mediated toxicity, (2) the ubiquitin–proteasome system as well as the mitochondrial proteases and chaperones ensure the proteostasis by refolding or degrading damaged mitochondrial proteins, and (3) the interconnected processes of mitochondrial dynamics (fusion and fission) and mitophagy controls mitochondrial size, shape and clearance (Sugiura et al. 2014). More recently, a study by Cadete et al. (2016) published in The Journal of Physiology provides evidence that mitochondrial-derived vesicles (MDVs) are also involved in the maintenance of cardiac mitochondrial homeostasis. Although the results are associative, the well-conducted experiments complemented by the relevant findings make this work attractive, opening a new field of investigation in cardiac mitochondrial physiology. MDVs are generated by selective incorporation of mitochondrial cargo into small vesicles (70–150 nm of diameter) which transit to the lysosome for subsequent degradation (Sugiura et al. 2014). Despite it being a conserved mechanism from bacteria to mammals, the presence of MDVs and their physiological relevance in various cells types, including cardiomyocytes, needs to be clarified. In an attempt to characterize the role of MDVs in heart physiology, Cadete et al. (2016) used both in vitro and in vivo approaches. The authors first showed the presence of MDVs in H9C2 myoblasts (a cardiac cell line). It is worth mentioning that their innovative approach of switching the cell energy substrate from glucose to galactose, in order to stimulate the mitochondrial metabolism, helped the authors to identify MDVs under normal conditions. MDVs were identified by their apparent size and selective enrichment for mitochondrial markers from both matrix (PDH – pyruvate dehydrogenase) and outer membrane (TOM20 – translocase of the outer membrane) at baseline. A further increase in MDVs along with a hyperfused mitochondrial network was detected upon mild oxidative stress. Under severe oxidative stress myoblasts accumulated both PDH-enriched vesicles and fragmented mitochondria. Using another stress condition, authors demonstrated that doxorubicin-induced stress increased MDV formation within 30 min without affecting mitochondrial morphology and bioenergetics in myoblasts. Interestingly, PDH and TOM20-enriched vesicles gradually declined in the following 6 h, while the mitochondrial network became fragmented. Therefore, the authors suggest that MDV formation (1) occurs in cardiac cells, (2) is responsive to specific mitochondrial stress conditions and (3) precedes mitochondrial dysfunction. Despite H9C2 myoblasts having been widely studied as a cardiac cell line, they are phenotypically and metabolically different from cardiomyocytes. In order to verify whether MDV formation occurs in cardiomyocyte-like cells, H9C2 cells undergoing differentiation were analysed. At baseline, a 3-fold increase in both PDHand TOM20-enriched vesicles were detected in differentiated H9C2 cells compared to myoblasts. Moreover, differentiated cells increased MDVs upon mitochondrial stress. This scenario can be explained, at least in part, by the shift from glycolytic to oxidative metabolism along with an increasing number of mitochondria that occurs during cellular differentiation. Similarly, Soubannier et al. (2012) showed that elevated mitochondrial metabolism increases MDV transit to the lysosome upon stress in HeLa cells. In a second arm of the study, the authors used ultrastructural analysis to determine the physiological relevance of MDV formation in vivo. In fact, single and double membrane MDVs measuring 50–200 nm in diameter, without any evident cristae, were identified in isolated mice hearts perfused with antimycin A (a mitochondrial complex III inhibitor). A better characterization of MDVs was performed using electron tomography analysis, where MDVs could be distinguished from sarcoplasmic reticulum or small mitochondria undergoing fission or fusion. Corroborating the in vitro data, MDVs were also observed in healthy mice hearts. Furthermore, mice acutely treated with doxorubicin also displayed increased MDVs (number and diameter) along with early signs of cardiac remodelling, mitochondrial dysfunction and mitophagy. Interestingly, autophagosomes containing mitochondria were fewer in number in doxorubicin-treated hearts compared to MDVs, while no autophagosomes were found in control mice hearts. Based on these findings, the authors suggest that MDVs are an active and physiologically relevant mitochondrial quality control element in cardiac cells. The mechanisms underlying MDV formation, transport and delivery to the lysosome are still poorly understood. For this reason, the physiological role of MDVs is difficult to determine. There are two pieces of evidence that support the authors’ claim about the involvement of MDV transit to the lysosome in the mitochondrial quality control system. First, MDV protein cargo is selectively incorporated based on the nature of mitochondrial stress. For example, global cellular oxidative stress induces MDVs carrying outer mitochondrial membrane proteins. On the other hand, oxidative stress inside the organelle leads to MDVs carrying mitochondrial complex III subunits (Sugiura et al. 2014). The second piece of evidence is that MDV transit to the lysosome requires the mitophagy-related
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