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Article
Stress-Induced Phosphorylation and Proteasomal Degradation of Mitofusin 2 Facilitates Mitochondrial Fragmentation and Apoptosis
Molecular Cell
  • Guillaume P. Leboucher
  • Yien Che Tsai
  • Mei Yang
  • Kristin C Shaw
  • Ming Zhou
  • Timothy D. Veenstra, Cedarville University
  • Michael H. Glickman
  • Allan M. Weissman
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-24-2012
DOI
10.1016/j.molcel.2012.05.041
PubMed ID
22748923
PubMed Central® ID
PMC3526191
Abstract

Mitochondria play central roles in integrating pro- and antiapoptotic stimuli, and JNK is well known to have roles in activating apoptotic pathways. We establish a critical link between stress-induced JNK activation, mitofusin 2, which is an essential component of the mitochondrial outer membrane fusion apparatus, and the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS). JNK phosphorylation of mitofusin 2 in response to cellular stress leads to recruitment of the ubiquitin ligase (E3) Huwe1/Mule/ARF-BP1/HectH9/E3Histone/Lasu1 to mitofusin 2, with the BH3 domain of Huwe1 implicated in this interaction. This results in ubiquitin-mediated proteasomal degradation of mitofusin 2, leading to mitochondrial fragmentation and enhanced apoptotic cell death. The stability of a nonphosphorylatable mitofusin 2 mutant is unaffected by stress and protective against apoptosis. Conversely, a mitofusin 2 phosphomimic is more rapidly degraded without cellular stress. These findings demonstrate how proximal signaling events can influence both mitochondrial dynamics and apoptosis through phosphorylation-stimulated degradation of the mitochondrial fusion machinery.

Keywords
  • Apoptosis,
  • cell line,
  • tumor,
  • mitochondria,
  • mitochondrial proteins,
  • phosphorylation,
  • stress,
  • physiological,
  • tumor suppressor proteins
Citation Information
Guillaume P. Leboucher, Yien Che Tsai, Mei Yang, Kristin C Shaw, et al.. "Stress-Induced Phosphorylation and Proteasomal Degradation of Mitofusin 2 Facilitates Mitochondrial Fragmentation and Apoptosis" Molecular Cell Vol. 47 Iss. 4 (2012) p. 547 - 557 ISSN: 1097-4164
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/timothy-veenstra/31/