Overexpression of parkin rescues the defective mitochondrial phenotype and the increased apoptosis of Cockayne Syndrome A cells.
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
The ERCC8/CSA gene encodes a WD-40 repeat protein (CSA) that is part of
a E3-ubiquitin ligase/COP9 signalosome complex. When mutated, CSA causes the
Cockayne Syndrome group A (CS-A), a rare recessive progeroid disorder characterized
by sun sensitivity and neurodevelopmental abnormalities. CS-A cells features include
ROS hyperproduction, accumulation of oxidative genome damage, mitochondrial
dysfunction and increased apoptosis that may contribute to the neurodegenerative
process. In this study, we show that CSA localizes to mitochondria and specifically
interacts with the mitochondrial fission protein dynamin-related protein (DRP1) that
is hyperactivated when CSA is defective. Increased fission is not counterbalanced
by increased mitophagy in CS-A cells thus leading to accumulation of fragmented
mitochondria. However, when mitochondria are challenged with the mitochondrial
toxin carbonyl cyanide m-chloro phenyl hydrazine, CS-A fibroblasts undergo mitophagy
as efficiently as normal fibroblasts, suggesting that this process remains targetable to
get rid of damaged mitochondria. Indeed, when basal mitophagy was potentiated by
overexpressing Parkin in CSA deficient cells, a significant rescue of the dysfunctional
mitochondrial phenotype was observed. Importantly, Parkin overexpression not only
reactivates basal mitophagy, but plays also an anti-apoptotic role by significantly
reducing the translocation of Bax at mitochondria in CS-A cells. These findings provide
new mechanistic insights into the role of CSA in mitochondrial maintenance and might
open new perspectives for therapeutic approaches.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Cockayne syndrome; mitochondrial dysfunction
Elenco autori:
Stefanini, Miria; Pascucci, Barbara; Orioli, Donata; Lanzafame, Manuela
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