SIRT3 deacetylates and activates OPA1 to regulate mitochondrial dynamics during stress

SA Samant, etc
MCB, 2013


Mitochondrial morphology is regulated by the balance between two counteracting mitochondrial processes of fusion and fission. There is significant evidence suggesting a stringent association between morphology and bioenergetics of mitochondria. Morphological alterations in mitochondria are linked to several pathological disorders including cardiovascular diseases. Consequences of stress-induced acetylation of mitochondrial proteins on the organelle morphology remain largely unexplored. Here we report that OPA1, a mitochondrial fusion protein was hyper-acetylated in hearts under pathologic stress, and this post-translational modification reduced GTPase activity of the protein. The mitochondrial deacetylase SIRT3 was capable of deacetylating OPA1 and elevating its GTPase activity. The mass spectrometry and mutagenesis analyses indicated that in SIRT3-deficient cells OPA1 was acetylated at lysine 926 and 931 residues. Over expression of deacetylation-mimetic version of OPA1 recovered mitochondrial functions of OPA1 null cells, thus demonstrating functional significance of K926/931 acetylation in regulating OPA1 activity. Moreover, SIRT3-dependent activation of OPA1 contributed to preservation of mitochondrial networking and protection of cardiomyocytes from doxorubicin-mediated cell death. In summary, these data indicated that SIRT3 not only promotes mitochondrial function by regulating activity of metabolic enzymes as previously reported, but also by regulating mitochondrial dynamics by targeting OPA1.

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Journal
MCB
Year
2013
Page
doi: 10.1128/MCB.01483-13
Institute
University of Chicago