OPA1‐dependent cristae modulation is essential for cellular adaptation to metabolic demand

DA Patten, J Wong, M Khacho, V Soubannier… - The EMBO …, 2014 - embopress.org
DA Patten, J Wong, M Khacho, V Soubannier, RJ Mailloux, K Pilon‐Larose, JG MacLaurin…
The EMBO journal, 2014embopress.org
Cristae, the organized invaginations of the mitochondrial inner membrane, respond
structurally to the energetic demands of the cell. The mechanism by which these dynamic
changes are regulated and the consequences thereof are largely unknown. Optic atrophy 1
(OPA 1) is the mitochondrial GTP ase responsible for inner membrane fusion and
maintenance of cristae structure. Here, we report that OPA 1 responds dynamically to
changes in energetic conditions to regulate cristae structure. This cristae regulation is …
Abstract
Cristae, the organized invaginations of the mitochondrial inner membrane, respond structurally to the energetic demands of the cell. The mechanism by which these dynamic changes are regulated and the consequences thereof are largely unknown. Optic atrophy 1 (OPA1) is the mitochondrial GTPase responsible for inner membrane fusion and maintenance of cristae structure. Here, we report that OPA1 responds dynamically to changes in energetic conditions to regulate cristae structure. This cristae regulation is independent of OPA1's role in mitochondrial fusion, since an OPA1 mutant that can still oligomerize but has no fusion activity was able to maintain cristae structure. Importantly, OPA1 was required for resistance to starvation‐induced cell death, for mitochondrial respiration, for growth in galactose media and for maintenance of ATP synthase assembly, independently of its fusion activity. We identified mitochondrial solute carriers (SLC25A) as OPA1 interactors and show that their pharmacological and genetic blockade inhibited OPA1 oligomerization and function. Thus, we propose a novel way in which OPA1 senses energy substrate availability, which modulates its function in the regulation of mitochondrial architecture in a SLC25A protein‐dependent manner.
embopress.org