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1.
Mol Biol Cell ; 28(11): 1530-1538, 2017 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28381427

ABSTRACT

Asymmetric cell division is the primary mechanism to generate cellular diversity, and it relies on the correct partitioning of cell fate determinants. However, the mechanism by which these determinants are delivered and positioned is poorly understood, and the upstream signal to initiate asymmetric cell division is unknown. Here we report that the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is asymmetrically partitioned during mitosis in epithelial cells just before delamination and selection of a proneural cell fate in the early Drosophila embryo. At the start of gastrulation, the ER divides asymmetrically into a population of asynchronously dividing cells at the anterior end of the embryo. We found that this asymmetric division of the ER depends on the highly conserved ER membrane protein Jagunal (Jagn). RNA inhibition of jagn just before the start of gastrulation disrupts this asymmetric division of the ER. In addition, jagn-deficient embryos display defects in apical-basal spindle orientation in delaminated embryonic neuroblasts. Our results describe a model in which an organelle is partitioned asymmetrically in an otherwise symmetrically dividing cell population just upstream of cell fate determination and updates previous models of spindle-based selection of cell fate during mitosis.


Subject(s)
Cell Division/physiology , Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Animals , Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Cell Differentiation/physiology , Cell Polarity/physiology , Drosophila/embryology , Drosophila/metabolism , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Mitosis/physiology , Spindle Apparatus/metabolism , Stem Cells/metabolism
2.
Cell Mol Life Sci ; 74(7): 1347-1363, 2017 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27858084

ABSTRACT

As an organellar network, mitochondria dynamically regulate their organization via opposing fusion and fission pathways to maintain bioenergetic homeostasis and contribute to key cellular pathways. This dynamic balance is directly linked to bioenergetic function: loss of transmembrane potential across the inner membrane (Δψ m) disrupts mitochondrial fission/fusion balance, causing fragmentation of the network. However, the level of Δψ m required for mitochondrial dynamic balance, as well as the relative contributions of fission and fusion pathways, have remained unclear. To explore this, mitochondrial morphology and Δψ m were examined via confocal imaging and tetramethyl rhodamine ester (TMRE) flow cytometry, respectively, in cultured 143B osteosarcoma cells. When normalized to the TMRE value of untreated 143B cells as 100%, both genetic (mtDNA-depleted ρ0) and pharmacological [carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP)-treated] cell models below 34% TMRE fluorescence were unable to maintain mitochondrial interconnection, correlating with loss of fusion-active long OPA1 isoforms (L-OPA1). Mechanistically, this threshold is maintained by mechanistic coordination of DRP1-mediated fission and OPA1-mediated fusion: cells lacking either DRP1 or the OMA1 metalloprotease were insensitive to loss of Δψ m, instead maintaining an obligately fused morphology. Collectively, these findings demonstrate a mitochondrial 'tipping point' threshold mediated by the interaction of Δψ m with both DRP1 and OMA1; moreover, DRP1 appears to be required for effective OPA1 maintenance and processing, consistent with growing evidence for direct interaction of fission and fusion pathways. These results suggest that Δψ m below threshold coordinately activates both DRP1-mediated fission and OMA1 cleavage of OPA1, collapsing mitochondrial dynamic balance, with major implications for a range of signaling pathways and cellular life/death events.


Subject(s)
GTP Phosphohydrolases/metabolism , Metalloproteases/metabolism , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/metabolism , Mitochondria/physiology , Mitochondrial Dynamics , Mitochondrial Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Carbonyl Cyanide m-Chlorophenyl Hydrazone/pharmacology , Cell Line, Tumor , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/metabolism , Dynamins , GTP Phosphohydrolases/deficiency , GTP Phosphohydrolases/genetics , HCT116 Cells , Humans , Membrane Potentials/drug effects , Metalloproteases/deficiency , Metalloproteases/genetics , Mice, Knockout , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/deficiency , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/genetics , Mitochondria/chemistry , Mitochondria/genetics , Mitochondrial Dynamics/drug effects , Mitochondrial Proteins/deficiency , Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction
3.
Front Biosci (Schol Ed) ; 7(1): 109-24, 2015 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25961690

ABSTRACT

Human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is a small maternally inherited DNA, typically present in hundreds of copies in a single human cell. Thus, despite its small size, the mitochondrial genome plays a crucial role in the metabolic homeostasis of the cell. Our understanding of mtDNA genotype-phenotype relationships is derived largely from studies of the classical mitochondrial neuromuscular diseases, in which mutations of mtDNA lead to compromised mitochondrial bioenergetic function, with devastating pathological consequences. Emerging research suggests that loss, rather than mutation, of mtDNA plays a major role across a range of prevalent human diseases, including diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, and aging. Here, we examine the 'rules' of mitochondrial genetics and function, the clinical settings in which loss of mtDNA is an emerging pathogenic mechanism, and explore mtDNA damage and its consequences for the organellar network and cell at large. As extranuclear genetic material arrayed throughout the cell to support metabolism, mtDNA is increasingly implicated in a host of disease conditions, opening a range of exciting questions regarding mtDNA and its role in cellular homeostasis.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Metabolic Diseases/genetics , Age Factors , Animals , Humans , Mitochondria/genetics , Mitochondrial Diseases/genetics , Mutation , Neuromuscular Diseases/genetics
4.
Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol ; 5(5): a011080, 2013 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23637282

ABSTRACT

The packaging of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) into DNA-protein assemblies called nucleoids provides an efficient segregating unit of mtDNA, coordinating mtDNA's involvement in cellular metabolism. From the early discovery of mtDNA as "extranuclear" genetic material, its organization into nucleoids and integration into both the mitochondrial organellar network and the cell at large via a variety of signal transduction pathways, mtDNA is a crucial component of the cell's homeostatic network. The mitochondrial nucleoid is composed of a set of DNA-binding core proteins involved in mtDNA maintenance and transcription, and a range of peripheral factors, which are components of signaling pathways controlling mitochondrial biogenesis, metabolism, apoptosis, and retrograde mitochondria-to-nucleus signaling. The molecular interactions of nucleoid components with the organellar network and cellular signaling pathways provide exciting clues to the dynamic integration of mtDNA into cellular metabolic homeostasis.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial/metabolism , Homeostasis , Mitochondria/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , DNA-Binding Proteins/physiology , Mitochondria/ultrastructure , Signal Transduction
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