作者
Charleen T. Chu,Jing Ji,Ruben K. Dagda,Jian Jiang,Yulia Y. Tyurina,Alexandr A. Kapralov,Vladimir A. Tyurin,Naveena Yanamala,Indira H. Shrivastava,Dariush Mohammadyani,Kent Zhi Qiang Wang,Jianhui Zhu,Judith Klein‐Seetharaman,Krishnakumar Balasubramanian,Andrew A. Amoscato,Grigory G. Borisenko,Zhentai Huang,Aaron M. Gusdon,Amin Cheikhi,Erin Steer,Ruth Wang,Catherine J. Baty,Simon C. Watkins,İvet Bahar,Hülya Bayır,Valerian E. Kagan
摘要
Recognition of injured mitochondria for degradation by macroautophagy is essential for cellular health, but the mechanisms remain poorly understood. Cardiolipin is an inner mitochondrial membrane phospholipid. We found that rotenone, staurosporine, 6-hydroxydopamine and other pro-mitophagy stimuli caused externalization of cardiolipin to the mitochondrial surface in primary cortical neurons and SH-SY5Y cells. RNAi knockdown of cardiolipin synthase or of phospholipid scramblase-3, which transports cardiolipin to the outer mitochondrial membrane, decreased the delivery of mitochondria to autophagosomes. Furthermore, we found that the autophagy protein microtubule-associated-protein-1 light chain 3 (LC3), which mediates both autophagosome formation and cargo recognition, contains cardiolipin-binding sites important for the engulfment of mitochondria by the autophagic system. Mutation of LC3 residues predicted as cardiolipin-interaction sites by computational modelling inhibited its participation in mitophagy. These data indicate that redistribution of cardiolipin serves as an ‘eat-me’ signal for the elimination of damaged mitochondria from neuronal cells. How injured mitochondria are targeted for autophagic degradation is not well understood. Chu and colleagues find that pro-mitophagy stimuli induce externalization of cardiolipin to the outer mitochondrial membrane of neuronal cells, and find that this is required for binding of the autophagy protein LC3 to mitochondria and mitophagy.