Cooperation between unc-26/synaptojanin and the dynamin-related protein DRP-1 during mitochondrial division
Dan Rube1, Todd Harris2, Erik Jorgensen2, Alexander van der Bliek1
2000. West Coast C. elegans Meeting
1 Department of Biological Chemistry, UCLA School of Medicine, P.O. Box 951737, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1737
2 Department of Biology, University of Utah, 257 South 1400 East Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0840
Mitochondria often exist as a dynamic tubular network. Individual
mitochondria frequently divide or fuse with neighboring mitochondria
in response to a variety of metabolic and cell division cues. Our
laboratory is interested in the mechanism of mitochondrial division
and how this mechanism is related to endocytosis. A first indication
that these processes may be related came from our studies of
dynamin-related protein (DRP-1) in the nematode C. elegans. We
discovered that DRP-1 is important for the final stage of division of
the mitochondrial outer membrane. This was surprising, because the
protein sequence is very similar to that of dynamin, which we know
mediates an early stage of clathrin mediated endocytosis. We
hypothesize that division of the mitochondrial outer membrane is
evolutionarily and mechanistically related to endocytic vesicle
formation. The very first endosymbiontic bacterium would have retained
parts of the endocytic machinery to divide the incipient mitochondrial
membranes.
To confirm this hypothesis, we are looking for additional proteins
that act both in endocytosis and in division of the mitochondrial
outer membrane. We are focusing on two well-known players in endocytic
vesicle formation, synaptojanin and endophilin, which might also be
candidates for mitochondrial division. We tested the effect of the
synaptojanin mutant unc-26(e205) on mitochondrial morphology using a
GFP with a mitochondrial leader sequence under control of the myo-3
promoter. The mitochondria in C. elegans body wall muscles appear as a
few large clumps rather than as numerous regularly shaped wild-type
mitochondrial bodies. These clumps may arise from impaired
mitochondrial division. Furthermore, this phenotype appears to be
partially rescued by overexpression of DRP-1. Our data thus indicates
that in C. elegans, synaptojanin itself plays a role in maintaining
proper mitochondrial morphology. Currently, we are seeking to
determine whether the morphology defect of unc-26(e205) mitochondria
arises from impaired mitochondrial division or disruption of another
mitochondrial process.