Mitochondrial shape is determined by fission and fusion reactions catalyzed by large GTPases of the dynamin family, mutation of which can cause neurological dysfunction. While fission-inducing protein phosphatases have been identified, the identity of opposing kinase signaling complexes has remained elusive. We report here that in both neurons and non-neuronal cells, cAMP elevation and expression of an outer-mitochondrial membrane (OMM) targeted form of the protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunit reshapes mitochondria into an interconnected network. Conversely, OMM-targeting of the PKA inhibitor PKI promotes mitochondrial fragmentation upstream of neuronal death. RNAi and overexpression approaches identify mitochondria-localized A kinase anchoring protein 1 (AKAP1) as a neuroprotective and mitochondria-stabilizing factor in vitro and in vivo. According to epistasis studies with phosphorylation site-mutant dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), inhibition of the mitochondrial fission enzyme through a conserved PKA site is the principal mechanism by which cAMP and PKA/AKAP1 promote both mitochondrial elongation and neuronal survival. Phenocopied by a mutation that slows GTP hydrolysis, Drp1 phosphorylation inhibits the disassembly step of its catalytic cycle, accumulating large, slowly recycling Drp1 oligomers at the OMM. Unopposed fusion then promotes formation of a mitochondrial reticulum, which protects neurons from diverse insults.
Mitochondrial shape is determined by fission and fusion reactions catalyzed by large GTPases of the dynamin family, mutation of which can cause neurological dysfunction. While fission-inducing protein phosphatases have been identified, the identity of opposing kinase signaling complexes has remained elusive. We report here that in both neurons and non-neuronal cells, cAMP elevation and expression of an outer-mitochondrial membrane (OMM) targeted form of the protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunit reshapes mitochondria into an interconnected network. Conversely, OMM-targeting of the PKA inhibitor PKI promotes mitochondrial fragmentation upstream of neuronal death. RNAi and overexpression approaches identify mitochondria-localized A kinase anchoring protein 1 (AKAP1) as a neuroprotective and mitochondria-stabilizing factor in vitro and in vivo. According to epistasis studies with phosphorylation site-mutant dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), inhibition of the mitochondrial fission enzyme through a conserved PKA site is the principal mechanism by which cAMP and PKA/AKAP1 promote both mitochondrial elongation and neuronal survival. Phenocopied by a mutation that slows GTP hydrolysis, Drp1 phosphorylation inhibits the disassembly step of its catalytic cycle, accumulating large, slowly recycling Drp1 oligomers at the OMM. Unopposed fusion then promotes formation of a mitochondrial reticulum, which protects neurons from diverse insults.
Opposing fission and fusion events determine the shape and interconnectivity of
mitochondria to regulate various aspects of their function, including ATP
production, Ca++ buffering, free radical homeostasis,
mitochondrial DNA inheritance, and organelle quality control. In addition,
fragmentation of neuronal mitochondria is necessary for their transport to and
proper development and function of synapses. Moreover, mitochondrial fission is an
early step in the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway, and inhibiting fission can block
or delay apoptosis in a variety of cell types, including neurons [1]–[3].Fission and fusion processes are catalyzed by large GTPases of the dynamin
superfamily. Mitochondrial fission requires dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), which,
similar to the “pinchase” dynamin, is thought to mechanically constrict
and eventually sever mitochondria. Normally a largely cytosolic protein, Drp1 is
recruited to the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM) by a poorly characterized
multiprotein complex that includes the transmembrane proteins Fis1 and Mff [4]–[6].
Mitochondrial fusion is carried out by the concerted action of OMM-anchored GTPases
(mitofusin-1 and -2 in vertebrates) and optic atrophy 1 (Opa1), a GTPase localized
to the intermembrane space [4]. A properly controlled fission/fusion balance appears to
be particularly critical in neurons, since mutations in mitochondrial fission/fusion
enzymes are responsible for common neurological disorders in humans [7]–[10]. All
mitochondria-restructuring enzymes are essential for mammalian development, as mice
that lack Drp1, Opa1, or either of the two mitofusins die during early embryogenesis
[11]–[14].Our understanding of the signaling events that regulate this group of organelle
shaping GTPases is limited. Drp1, in particular, is subject to complex
posttranslational modification by ubiquitylation, sumoylation, nitrosylation, and
phosphorylation [15],[16]. Highly conserved among metazoan Drp1 orthologs, the two
characterized serine phosphorylation sites are located 20 amino acids apart,
bordering the C-terminal GTPase effector domain (GED). Since the numbering differs
between Drp1 orthologs and splice variants, we will refer to these sites by the
kinase first shown to target them, rather than their sequence number.
SerCDK (Ser616 in human, Ser635 in rat splice variant 1) is
phosphorylated by the cyclin-dependant kinase 1/cyclin B complex, leading to
fragmentation of the mitochondrial network during mitosis. Phosphorylation of
SerPKA (Ser637 in human, Ser656 in rat splice variant 1) is mediated
by both PKA and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase I (CaMKI).
Three laboratories, including ours, found that SerPKA phosphorylation by
PKA promotes mitochondrial elongation presumably through Drp1 inhibition [17]–[19], whereas a
fourth group reported the opposite effect upon targeting of the same site by CaMKI
[20].We previously showed that Bβ2, a neuron-specific and OMM-targeted regulatory
subunit of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), sensitizes neurons to various insults by
promoting mitochondrial fission [21]. Here, we identify outer mitochondrial PKA as the
opposing fusion and survival promoting kinase. Evidence for a model is presented in
which the multifunctional scaffold protein AKAP1 recruits PKA to the OMM to
phosphorylate Drp1 at SerPKA. Phosphorylation traps Drp1 in large, slowly
recycling complexes, allowing mitochondria to fuse into a neuroprotective
reticulum.
Results
cAMP and Outer Mitochondrial PKA Activity Promote Mitochondrial
Elongation
In an effort to identify signal transduction pathways that alter the
mitochondrial fission/fusion balance, we investigated the effect of elevating
cAMP levels in PC12pheochromocytoma cells and primary hippocampal neurons.
Mitochondria were visualized by transfection with mitochondria-targeted GFP or
by live-staining with the fluorescent dye MitoTracker Red. Application of the
adenylate cyclase agonist forskolin either alone or in combination with the
phosphodiesterase type IV inhibitor rolipram resulted in the conversion of
mostly punctiform or short and stubby mitochondria to highly elongated and
interconnected organelles (Figure
1A–D). Mitochondrial shape changes were quantified by image
analysis [22]
as well as by blinded comparison to a set of reference images (length score 0 to
4; Figure
S1A; [21]). Both methods yielded comparable elongation measures
that correlated on a cell-by-cell basis (Figure S1B, C, and D). Mitochondrial
elongation was readily apparent within 30 min of forskolin addition and was
insensitive to inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide, which together
suggests non-genomic actions of cAMP (Figure 1B). Mitochondrial elongation mediated
by forskolin or the membrane permeable cAMP analog cpt-cAMP lasted for at least
20 h in PC12 cells and in the soma of hippocampal neurons (Figure 1C,D).
TMRM or MitoTracker-stained PC12 cells (A–C) or hippocampal neurons
(D) were treated for the indicated times with either vehicle or the
listed compounds and mitochondrial morphology was quantified by blinded
comparison to reference images (B–D, means ± S.E.M.). (A)
Representative epifluorescence images show formation of interconnected
mitochondria upon treatment of PC12 cells with forskolin/rolipram
(forsk/roli, 20 µM/1 µM, 3 h). In the representative
experiment shown in (B), rapid mitochondrial elongation by 50 µM
forskolin is not affected by 100 µg/ml cycloheximide to inhibit
protein synthesis. Long-term (20 h) forskolin or a cell-permeant cAMP
analog (200 µM cpt-cAMP) promotes mitochondrial fusion in PC12
cells (C) and hippocampal neurons (D); summaries of three independent
experiments with 20–30 cells per condition are shown.
TMRM or MitoTracker-stained PC12 cells (A–C) or hippocampal neurons
(D) were treated for the indicated times with either vehicle or the
listed compounds and mitochondrial morphology was quantified by blinded
comparison to reference images (B–D, means ± S.E.M.). (A)
Representative epifluorescence images show formation of interconnected
mitochondria upon treatment of PC12 cells with forskolin/rolipram
(forsk/roli, 20 µM/1 µM, 3 h). In the representative
experiment shown in (B), rapid mitochondrial elongation by 50 µM
forskolin is not affected by 100 µg/ml cycloheximide to inhibit
protein synthesis. Long-term (20 h) forskolin or a cell-permeant cAMP
analog (200 µM cpt-cAMP) promotes mitochondrial fusion in PC12
cells (C) and hippocampal neurons (D); summaries of three independent
experiments with 20–30 cells per condition are shown.To implicate PKA in the morphogenetic effects of cAMP, we established clonal PC12
cell lines that inducibly express the PKA inhibitory peptide PKI fused to GFP
and the outer mitochondrial anchor domain of MAS70p (omPKI). Cells with
inducible expression of an OMM-directed form of the protein phosphatase 1 (PP1)
modulator inhibitor-2 (omInh2) were analyzed for comparison (Figure 2A). Induction of omPKI
by doxycycline resulted in mitochondrial fragmentation, measured both by
subjective scoring and image analysis. Conversely, mitochondria decorated with
the PP1 inhibitor were significantly elongated compared to mitochondria of
uninduced cells (Figure
2B–D).
Figure 2
Inducible inhibition of outer mitochondrial PKA antagonizes
mitochondrial fusion and survival.
(A) Lysates of clonal PC12 cell lines (clone numbers listed) expressing
outer-mitochondrial GFP-PKI (omPKI) or GFP-inhibitor-2 (omInh2) from a
doxycycline (Dox)-inducible promoter were treated ± Dox (1
µg/ml, 48 h) or forskolin (forsk, 10 µM, 2 h) and
immunoblotted for GFP, PKA substrates (RXX[pS/pT] antibody),
and PP2A/C as a loading control. (B–D) PC12::omPKI and omInh2
cells were analyzed for mitochondrial morphology ± Dox induction
for 2 d (representative confocal images of live cells stained with TMRM
(B), reference image based length scores in (C), and digital morphometry
in (D) of the same set of 31–38 cells). (E, F) PC12 cell lines
were treated ± Dox for 2 d to induce omPKI or omInh2, followed by
a 2 d challenge with staurosporine or H2O2. In
(E), viability was scored by a colorimetric assay (tetrazolium reduction
to formazan), while apoptotic nuclei were counted in (F). Bar graphs
show means ± S.E.M. and are representative of at least three
independent experiments. Student's t test
comparisons are between ± Dox-treated cultures.
Inducible inhibition of outer mitochondrial PKA antagonizes
mitochondrial fusion and survival.
(A) Lysates of clonal PC12 cell lines (clone numbers listed) expressing
outer-mitochondrial GFP-PKI (omPKI) or GFP-inhibitor-2 (omInh2) from a
doxycycline (Dox)-inducible promoter were treated ± Dox (1
µg/ml, 48 h) or forskolin (forsk, 10 µM, 2 h) and
immunoblotted for GFP, PKA substrates (RXX[pS/pT] antibody),
and PP2A/C as a loading control. (B–D) PC12::omPKI and omInh2
cells were analyzed for mitochondrial morphology ± Dox induction
for 2 d (representative confocal images of live cells stained with TMRM
(B), reference image based length scores in (C), and digital morphometry
in (D) of the same set of 31–38 cells). (E, F) PC12 cell lines
were treated ± Dox for 2 d to induce omPKI or omInh2, followed by
a 2 d challenge with staurosporine or H2O2. In
(E), viability was scored by a colorimetric assay (tetrazolium reduction
to formazan), while apoptotic nuclei were counted in (F). Bar graphs
show means ± S.E.M. and are representative of at least three
independent experiments. Student's t test
comparisons are between ± Dox-treated cultures.Given that mitochondrial fragmentation is associated with apoptotic and
non-apoptotic cell death [2],[3], we examined cell lines expressing
mitochondria-targeted PP1 and PKA inhibitors for their susceptibility to
apoptotic stressors. Inhibition of neither outer mitochondrial PP1 nor PKA
affected survival or growth of PC12 cells under basal conditions (Figure 2F and unpublished
data). In contrast, induction of omPKI was associated with increased sensitivity
to several apoptosis inducers, including H2O2 and
staurosporine (Figure 2E,F).
These results indicate that PKA activity at the mitochondrial surface opposes
fragmentation of this organelle and increases resistance to apoptosis
inducers.
PKA/AKAP1 Supports Neuronal Survival and Mitochondrial Network
Integrity
AKAPs recruit the PKA holoenzyme to specific subcellular sites and substrates,
which is critical for the physiological actions of the kinase [23]. Of the
three AKAPs that have been localized to mitochondria, the OMM-anchored AKAP1
(also known as D-AKAP1, AKAP121, AKAP149) has previously been shown to enhance
survival in PC12 cells [24]. We expressed AKAP1-GFP in hippocampal neurons and
scored apoptosis either under basal conditions or 2 d after treatment with
rotenone, an inhibitor of complex 1 of the electron transport chain that is
commonly used as a chemical model of Parkinson's disease. Wild-type AKAP1,
but not a point mutant that cannot bind the PKA holoenzyme (AKAP1ΔPKA
= I310P, L316P; Figure S2A), had a potent neuroprotective
effect under both conditions (Figure 3A). Conversely, knockdown of endogenous AKAP1 with two
different shRNAs (Figure S2B,C) dramatically amplified both
basal and rotenone-induced neuronal death (Figure 3A). Additionally, as we observed in
stressed PC12 cells, inhibiting outer mitochondrial PKA by expressing omPKI
resulted in increased basal apoptosis in hippocampal neurons. Thus, AKAP1
enhances neuronal survival by recruiting PKA to the OMM. Our finding that AKAP1
and outer mitochondrial PKA are critical for neuronal viability contrasts with
the mild phenotypes seen in unconditional AKAP1 knockout mice [25]. It is
possible that other mitochondrial AKAPs may be able to compensate if AKAP1 is
never expressed.
Figure 3
Mitochondrial PKA and AKAP1 promote neuronal survival and oppose
mitochondrial fragmentation in vitro and in vivo.
(A) Hippocampal neurons were transfected with the indicated cDNA and
shRNA plasmids (AKAP1ΔPKA = I310P,L316P
[PKA binding defective]; Figure
S2C). After 3 d, cells were treated ± 400 nM rotenone
for 2 d, fixed, and analyzed by counting apoptotic nuclei in the
transfected neuron population (means ± s.e.m. of
n = 3–7 experiments).
The inset shows two transfected neurons (green) with apoptotic nuclei
and an untransfected neuron with normal nucleus (asterisk). (B, C)
Representative confocal sections of TMRM-stained (mito) hippocampal
neurons (B) and their mitochondrial length scores (C) 3 d after
transfection with the indicated cDNA and shRNA constructs are shown
(means ± s.e.m. of
n = 3–5 experiments;
Student's t test comparisons between GFP fusion
proteins and omGFP and between AKAP1 and NS shRNAs). (D–F) Rats
injected with lentivirus expressing mitochondrial (m)GFP and AKAP1-GFP
into the hippocampus and striatum of left and right hemispheres,
respectively, were analyzed 7–14 d later for mitochondrial shape.
Perfusion-fixed cryostat sections immunolabeled for GFP (representative
confocal image in (D), counterstained for nuclei with TOPRO-3
[blue]) were subjected to ImageJ software-based morphometry.
Scatter plots (E, F) correlate form factor (inverse of circularity of
individual mitochondria) with cumulative area:perimeter ratio (a measure
of network connectivity). Each open symbol represents average shape
metrics from 10–22 z-sections of one neuron; filled symbols are
population averages (± s.d., 29–42 neurons per condition
from 2 (E) and 3 (F) rats).
Mitochondrial PKA and AKAP1 promote neuronal survival and oppose
mitochondrial fragmentation in vitro and in vivo.
(A) Hippocampal neurons were transfected with the indicated cDNA and
shRNA plasmids (AKAP1ΔPKA = I310P,L316P
[PKA binding defective]; Figure
S2C). After 3 d, cells were treated ± 400 nM rotenone
for 2 d, fixed, and analyzed by counting apoptotic nuclei in the
transfected neuron population (means ± s.e.m. of
n = 3–7 experiments).
The inset shows two transfected neurons (green) with apoptotic nuclei
and an untransfected neuron with normal nucleus (asterisk). (B, C)
Representative confocal sections of TMRM-stained (mito) hippocampal
neurons (B) and their mitochondrial length scores (C) 3 d after
transfection with the indicated cDNA and shRNA constructs are shown
(means ± s.e.m. of
n = 3–5 experiments;
Student's t test comparisons between GFP fusion
proteins and omGFP and between AKAP1 and NS shRNAs). (D–F) Rats
injected with lentivirus expressing mitochondrial (m)GFP and AKAP1-GFP
into the hippocampus and striatum of left and right hemispheres,
respectively, were analyzed 7–14 d later for mitochondrial shape.
Perfusion-fixed cryostat sections immunolabeled for GFP (representative
confocal image in (D), counterstained for nuclei with TOPRO-3
[blue]) were subjected to ImageJ software-based morphometry.
Scatter plots (E, F) correlate form factor (inverse of circularity of
individual mitochondria) with cumulative area:perimeter ratio (a measure
of network connectivity). Each open symbol represents average shape
metrics from 10–22 z-sections of one neuron; filled symbols are
population averages (± s.d., 29–42 neurons per condition
from 2 (E) and 3 (F) rats).To investigate whether the pro-survival effects of PKA/AKAP1 are associated with
changes in mitochondrial morphology, TMRM-stained mitochondria of hippocampal
neurons were imaged 2–3 d after transfection. As previously reported in
other cell types [26], AKAP1-GFP colocalized perfectly with mitochondria in
hippocampal neurons (Figure
3B). Compared to OMM-targeted GFP or the AKAP1 mutant that cannot
recruit PKA, overexpression of wild-type AKAP1 increased mitochondrial length
scores in the somal mitochondria (Figure 3B,C). AKAP1 expression also increased mitochondrial form
factor in dendrites of hippocampal neurons (Figure
S3A,B). Targeting the PKA catalytic subunit directly to the OMM
(omPKA) resulted in even more striking mitochondrial fusion, often culminating
in perinuclear aggregation of mitochondria into a single mass. Conversely,
either expression of OMM-tethered PKI or silencing of AKAP1 with two shRNAs
induced significant somatic mitochondrial fragmentation as compared to
OMM-targeted GFP and nonsense shRNA controls (Figure 3C). AKAP1 knockdown also induced
mitochondrial fragmentation in dendrites of hippocampal neurons (Figure
S3A,B). To rule out off-target effects, we silenced the endogenous
protein in PC12 cells by co-expression of ratAKAP1-directed shRNAs with or
without plasmids encoding humanAKAP1, which diverges at both shRNA target
sites. HumanAKAP1 reversed the mitochondrial fragmentation induced by ratAKAP1-directed shRNAs (Figure S4A,B), indicating that loss of
mitochondrial interconnectivity is due to specific silencing of the endogenous
protein.
AKAP1 Expression Leads to Mitochondrial Elongation In Vivo
Lentivirus expressing AKAP1-GFP was stereotaxically injected into the right
striatum and hippocampus of rats; the left hemisphere received injections with a
control lentivirus encoding mitochondrial (m)GFP (targeted via the N terminus of
cytochrome oxidase VIII). After 7–14 d, mitochondrial shape was assessed
by automated morphometry of confocal z-stacks from perfusion-fixed brain
sections (Figure 3D).
Compared to mGFP, lentiviral delivery of AKAP1 into the hippocampus and striatum
induced robust mitochondrial fusion as indicated by two independent metrics,
form factor, which measures elongation of individual mitochondria, and
cumulative area:perimeter ratio, which measures mitochondrial interconnectivity
(Figure 3E,F). Thus,
neuroprotection by PKA/AKAP1 is associated with mitochondrial elongation both in
vitro and in vivo.
We carried out epistasis experiments in hippocampal neurons to determine whether
PKA-mediated changes in mitochondrial shape and neuronal survival are causally
related. Initially, we showed that overexpression of the antiapoptotic Bcl2
protein prevented apoptosis induced by inhibiting PKA with omPKI but had no
effect on omPKI-induced mitochondrial fragmentation (Figure 4A,B). Similarly, Bcl2 rescued neurons
from apoptosis due to AKAP1 silencing without restoring normal mitochondrial
morphology (Figure S5). Therefore, mitochondrial fragmentation due to PKA
inhibition occurs either independently of or upstream of apoptosis.
Figure 4
Mitochondrial restructuring underlies survival regulation by outer
mitochondrial PKA.
(A, B) Hippocampal neurons were transfected with the indicated plasmid
combinations and scored after 2–3 d for mitochondrial morphology
(A, live TMRM stain) or after 5–6 d for apoptosis (B, %
transfected neurons with condensed/fragmented nuclei). Means ±
s.e.m. of n = 3–6
experiments are shown. (C) Model summarizing effects of PKA/AKAP1 on
mitochondrial shape and neuronal survival.
Mitochondrial restructuring underlies survival regulation by outer
mitochondrial PKA.
(A, B) Hippocampal neurons were transfected with the indicated plasmid
combinations and scored after 2–3 d for mitochondrial morphology
(A, live TMRM stain) or after 5–6 d for apoptosis (B, %
transfected neurons with condensed/fragmented nuclei). Means ±
s.e.m. of n = 3–6
experiments are shown. (C) Model summarizing effects of PKA/AKAP1 on
mitochondrial shape and neuronal survival.To distinguish between these possibilities, we interfered with mitochondrial
fission by dominant-negative (K38A mutant) Drp1 or Fis1 knockdown. Blocking the
mitochondrial fission machinery fully restored viability of neurons transfected
with omPKI, demonstrating that PKA inhibition kills by inducing mitochondrial
fission. In contrast, AKAP1 silencing with two shRNAs compromised neuronal
viability in a manner that could not be reversed by inhibiting mitochondrial
fission (Figure
S5). Our data thus point to an essential function of AKAP1 beyond
localizing PKA to maintain mitochondrial integrity. In this regard, the AKAP1
gene gives rise to multiple splice variants, which have been localized to the
endoplasmatic reticulum and nuclear lamina, in addition to mitochondria. Also,
AKAP1 interacts not only with PKA but also with various other signaling enzymes
and mRNA [26].The data thus far suggest a model in which the cAMP signaling through the outer
mitochondrial PKA/AKAP1 complex opposes the mitochondria fragmenting activity of
several protein phosphatases including PP2A [21], PP2B/calcineurin [18],[18], and likely
PP1 (Figure 2C,D).
Kinase/phosphates-regulated mitochondrial shape changes control neuronal
vulnerability to a variety of challenges (Figure 4C).
PKA/AKAP1 Slows Turnover of Mitochondrial Drp1
PKA/AKAP1 could maintain elongated mitochondria by inhibiting fission or
promoting fusion reactions. The mitochondrial fission enzyme Drp1 was previously
shown to be phosphorylated by PKA and phospho-mimetic substitution of the
targeted Ser residue causes mitochondrial elongation [18],[19]. We therefore examined the
mobility of Drp1 by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP), replacing
endogenous Drp1 in PC12 cells with the GFP-tagged protein by a single-plasmid
RNAi/expression strategy (Figure S2D) [18]. Similar to the endogenous
fission enzyme, GFP-Drp1 was localized diffusely in the cytosol, as well as in
punctate structures on mitochondria (Figure 5A). Fluorescence recovery of
mitochondrial GFP-Drp1 could be well approximated by double exponential fits
(R
2>0.99) and was largely independent of the
size of the bleached area, indicating that Drp1 mobility follows reaction-
rather than diffusion-limited kinetics [27]. Drp1 fluorescence
recovery was also shown to be unaffected by prior fragmentation of mitochondria
via protonophore treatment (Figure S6), indicating that Drp1 turnover
determines mitochondrial shape and not vice versa.
Figure 5
cAMP and PKA/AKAP1 decrease mobility and promote mitochondrial
translocation of Drp1.
(A) Confocal micrograph showing mixed cytosolic and mitochondrial
localization of GFP-Drp1 in PC12 cells (mito, MitoTracker Deep Red).
(B–D) FRAP analysis in PC12 cells shows opposite effects of PKA
activation and AKAP1 knockdown on GFP-Drp1 dynamics. PC12 cells
co-expressing GFP-Drp1 and either AKAP1-directed or control shRNA were
treated ± forskolin/rolipram (25/1 µM, 1–3 h) and
Drp1 turnover was measured by bleaching mitochondrial GFP-Drp1 in a
5×5 µm square and monitoring fluorescence recovery at 5 s
intervals. (B) shows frames from representative cells (control,
forsk/roli: control shRNA ± forskolin/rolipram; shAKAP1: AKAP1
shRNA #1), (C) shows averaged fluorescence recovery curves, and (D)
plots Drp1 turnover as the ratio of mobile fraction (mFx) and 50%
recovery time (t1/2) derived from biexponential fits
(R
2∼0.99) of individual recovery
curves (means ± s.e.m. of 8–10 cells for each condition
from a representative experiment). (E–F) Subcellular fractionation
of Drp1. COS cells co-expressing GFP-Drp1 with either outer
mitochondrial (om) PKA (+) or omGFP (−) were permeabilized
with digitonin (500 µg/ml) and fractionated into a cytosolic
(cyto) and a heavy membrane fraction containing mitochondria (mito).
Fractions were immunoblotted for total Drp1, phospho-SerPKA
Drp1 (pDrp1), and the mitochondrial marker TOM40 and analyzed by
densitometry (E, representative blot; F, summary showing means ±
s.e.m. of 6 independent experiments).
cAMP and PKA/AKAP1 decrease mobility and promote mitochondrial
translocation of Drp1.
(A) Confocal micrograph showing mixed cytosolic and mitochondrial
localization of GFP-Drp1 in PC12 cells (mito, MitoTracker Deep Red).
(B–D) FRAP analysis in PC12 cells shows opposite effects of PKA
activation and AKAP1 knockdown on GFP-Drp1 dynamics. PC12 cells
co-expressing GFP-Drp1 and either AKAP1-directed or control shRNA were
treated ± forskolin/rolipram (25/1 µM, 1–3 h) and
Drp1 turnover was measured by bleaching mitochondrial GFP-Drp1 in a
5×5 µm square and monitoring fluorescence recovery at 5 s
intervals. (B) shows frames from representative cells (control,
forsk/roli: control shRNA ± forskolin/rolipram; shAKAP1: AKAP1
shRNA #1), (C) shows averaged fluorescence recovery curves, and (D)
plots Drp1 turnover as the ratio of mobile fraction (mFx) and 50%
recovery time (t1/2) derived from biexponential fits
(R
2∼0.99) of individual recovery
curves (means ± s.e.m. of 8–10 cells for each condition
from a representative experiment). (E–F) Subcellular fractionation
of Drp1. COS cells co-expressing GFP-Drp1 with either outer
mitochondrial (om) PKA (+) or omGFP (−) were permeabilized
with digitonin (500 µg/ml) and fractionated into a cytosolic
(cyto) and a heavy membrane fraction containing mitochondria (mito).
Fractions were immunoblotted for total Drp1, phospho-SerPKADrp1 (pDrp1), and the mitochondrial marker TOM40 and analyzed by
densitometry (E, representative blot; F, summary showing means ±
s.e.m. of 6 independent experiments).Silencing of AKAP1 increased the cytosolic pool at the expense of the
mitochondrial pool of GFP-Drp1 and accelerated fluorescence recovery of
mitochondrial GFP-Drp1. Activation of PKA by forskolin/rolipram treatment had
the opposite effect, increasing mitochondrial localization of GFP-Drp1 and
slowing its turnover (Figure
5B,C). Faster Drp1 recovery was reflected in an increase in the
plateau of the double exponential fit (mobile fraction) and a decrease in the
50% recovery time constant (t1/2); therefore, we expressed
Drp1 turnover as the ratio of the two curve-fitting parameters (Figure 5D).In support of the imaging experiments, subcellular fractionation of GFP-Drp1
expressed in COS cells showed that 80% of the fission protein is
cytosolic, while 20% localizes to a heavy membrane fraction that includes
mitochondria (Figure 5E,F).
Co-expression of OMM-targeted PKA catalytic subunit induced phosphorylation of
Drp1SerPKA mainly in the mitochondrial fraction as detected with a
phosphorylation state-specific antibody. Moreover, omPKA expression resulted in
a robust relocalization of Drp1 towards mitochondria (43%, Figure 5E,F). Together, these
data implicate Drp1 as a target of PKA/AKAP1 and suggest that phosphorylation
may slow the catalytic cycle of Drp1 by trapping the fission protein at the
mitochondrial membrane.
Drp1 SerPKA Phosphorylation Is Required for PKA/AKAP1-Mediated
Mitochondrial Fusion
To explore the role of Drp1 phosphorylation in mitochondrial remodeling by PKA,
we replaced endogenous Drp1 in PC12 cells with mutant Drp1 that cannot be
phosphorylated by PKA (SerPKAAla,
SerPKA = Ser656 in rat splice variant 1) and
analyzed mitochondrial morphology at basal or forskolin/rolipram-stimulated cAMP
levels. Mutation of SerPKA in Drp1 rendered cells largely refractory
to mitochondrial elongation by cAMP (Figure 6A,B). To confirm the critical
importance of Drp1SerPKA in the mitochondria-shaping effects of PKA
in non-neuronal cells, HeLa cells expressing either wild-type or
SPKAA-mutant Drp1 were also transfected with the catalytic subunit of
PKA, either with or without an OMM targeting sequence. Compared to control
transfected cells, both forms of PKA resulted in significant mitochondrial
elongation, with mitochondrial PKA being more effective than cytosolic PKA. The
non-phosphorylatable Drp1 mutant attenuated mitochondrial remodeling by either
form of PKA to a similar extent (Figure 6C,D).
Figure 6
PKA shapes mitochondria through phosphorylation of Drp1 at
SerPKA.
(A, B) PC12 cells expressing mitochondrial GFP (green) and either
wild-type or SPKAA-mutant Drp1 instead of endogenous Drp1
were treated ± forskolin/rolipram (25/2 µM, 3 h), fixed,
and epifluorescence micrographs (representatives in A) were subjected to
digital morphometry (means ± s.e.m. of ∼300 cells per
condition from a representative experiment). (C–D) HeLa cells
co-expressing the indicated constructs (om, outer mitochondrial) were
fixed and processed for immunofluorescence for mitochondrial cytochrome
oxidase II (mito, red) and GFP (green). Shown are representative images
(C) and mitochondrial morphology analysis (D, means ± s.e.m. of
∼200–300 cells per condition from a representative
experiment). (E–G) HeLa cells expressing WT or
SPKAD-mutant GFP-Drp1 were incubated for up to 4 h with the
PKA inhibitor H89 (20 µM) and analyzed by quantitative
immunoblotting for phosphorylated (pDrp1, SerPKA, and
SerCDK) and total Drp1 (E) or by immunofluorescence for
mitochondrial morphology (F, representative image; G, means ±
s.e.m. of ∼200 cells/condition from a representative experiment).
For immunoblot analysis only (E), trace amounts (5% plasmid) of
PKA catalytic subunit were cotransfected to increase the signal strength
with the phospho-SerPKA Drp1 antibody.
PKA shapes mitochondria through phosphorylation of Drp1 at
SerPKA.
(A, B) PC12 cells expressing mitochondrial GFP (green) and either
wild-type or SPKAA-mutant Drp1 instead of endogenous Drp1
were treated ± forskolin/rolipram (25/2 µM, 3 h), fixed,
and epifluorescence micrographs (representatives in A) were subjected to
digital morphometry (means ± s.e.m. of ∼300 cells per
condition from a representative experiment). (C–D) HeLa cells
co-expressing the indicated constructs (om, outer mitochondrial) were
fixed and processed for immunofluorescence for mitochondrial cytochrome
oxidase II (mito, red) and GFP (green). Shown are representative images
(C) and mitochondrial morphology analysis (D, means ± s.e.m. of
∼200–300 cells per condition from a representative
experiment). (E–G) HeLa cells expressing WT or
SPKAD-mutant GFP-Drp1 were incubated for up to 4 h with the
PKA inhibitor H89 (20 µM) and analyzed by quantitative
immunoblotting for phosphorylated (pDrp1, SerPKA, and
SerCDK) and total Drp1 (E) or by immunofluorescence for
mitochondrial morphology (F, representative image; G, means ±
s.e.m. of ∼200 cells/condition from a representative experiment).
For immunoblot analysis only (E), trace amounts (5% plasmid) of
PKA catalytic subunit were cotransfected to increase the signal strength
with the phospho-SerPKADrp1 antibody.We then explored the role of basal PKA activity in the maintenance of
mitochondrial shape. Incubation of HeLa cells with the PKA inhibitor H89
resulted in a protracted loss of phosphate from Drp1SerPKA but did
not affect Drp1 phosphorylation at the neighboring SerCDK (Figure 6E). Paralleling the
time course of Drp1SerPKA dephosphorylation, mitochondria in
wild-type GFP-Drp1-expressing cells underwent fragmentation upon endogenous PKA
inhibition. HeLa cells expressing pseudophosphorylated Drp1
(SerPKAAsp mutant) on the other hand were completely refractory to
H89-induced mitochondrial fission (Figure 6F,G).To examine the influence of AKAP1 on Drp1 phosphorylation, COS cells were
co-transfected with Drp1 and either empty vector, wild-type AKAP1, or the
PKA-binding deficient AKAP1 mutant and stimulated with forskolin/rolipram.
Especially at lower forskolin/rolipram concentrations, recruitment of the PKA
holoenzyme to mitochondria via wild-type AKAP1 significantly enhanced Drp1
phosphorylation at SerPKA (Figure 7A,B). Essentially identical results
were obtained with neuronal PC12 cells (Figure S7). Rationalizing these findings, we
hypothesize that SerPKA of mitochondrial Drp1 is more exposed to
phosphorylation by PKA; alternatively, SerPKA-phosphorylated,
mitochondrial Drp1 may be relatively protected from cytosolic protein
phosphatases, such as calcineurin.
Figure 7
AKAP1 promotes mitochondrial elongation and neuronal survival by
enhancing phosphorylation of Drp1 at SerPKA.
(A, B) COS cells co-expressing GFP-Drp1 and either empty vector,
wild-type, or ΔPKA-mutant GFP-AKAP11–524 were
stimulated for 45 min with increasing concentrations of
forskolin/rolipram (rolipram at 1/30th of the indicated
forskolin concentrations), and total cell lysates were probed for
phospho-SerPKA Drp1 and GFP (detecting Drp1 and AKAP1) on
the same blot using a dual-channel infrared imager. Drp1 phosphorylation
was quantified as the ratio of phospho- to total Drp1 signals normalized
to the highest value and is shown as part of the representative blots
(A) and the summary graph (B, means ± s.e.m. of 6 independent
experiments). (C, D) HeLa cells co-expressing the indicated constructs
(ΔPKA = I310P, L316P-mutant) were treated
with forskolin/rolipram (25/2 µM, 3 h) and processed for
immunofluorescence for mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase II (mito, red)
and V5-tagged AKAP1 (green). Shown are representative images (C) and
mitochondrial morphology analysis (D, mean ± s.e.m. of
∼200–300 cells per condition from a representative
experiment). (E, F) PC12 cells were cotransfected with GFP-Drp1/shRNA
expression plasmids and either AKAP1 cDNAs or shRNAs. Cultures were
treated 48 h posttransfection with 0.5 µM staurosporine for 24 h,
fixed, and stained with Hoechst 33342. Representative images in (E) show
overlays of cell contours (bright field), GFP-Drp1 (green), and
Hoechst-stained nuclei (blue), with transfected cells displaying normal
nuclear morphology and many untransfected cells having condensed,
apoptotic nuclei (arrows). Apoptosis was quantified as the percentage of
GFP-positive cells with condensed or fragmented nuclei (E, means
± s.e.m. of 6–13 image fields with ∼300 transfected
cells per condition from one experiment representative of three).
AKAP1 promotes mitochondrial elongation and neuronal survival by
enhancing phosphorylation of Drp1 at SerPKA.
(A, B) COS cells co-expressing GFP-Drp1 and either empty vector,
wild-type, or ΔPKA-mutant GFP-AKAP11–524 were
stimulated for 45 min with increasing concentrations of
forskolin/rolipram (rolipram at 1/30th of the indicated
forskolin concentrations), and total cell lysates were probed for
phospho-SerPKADrp1 and GFP (detecting Drp1 and AKAP1) on
the same blot using a dual-channel infrared imager. Drp1 phosphorylation
was quantified as the ratio of phospho- to total Drp1 signals normalized
to the highest value and is shown as part of the representative blots
(A) and the summary graph (B, means ± s.e.m. of 6 independent
experiments). (C, D) HeLa cells co-expressing the indicated constructs
(ΔPKA = I310P, L316P-mutant) were treated
with forskolin/rolipram (25/2 µM, 3 h) and processed for
immunofluorescence for mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase II (mito, red)
and V5-tagged AKAP1 (green). Shown are representative images (C) and
mitochondrial morphology analysis (D, mean ± s.e.m. of
∼200–300 cells per condition from a representative
experiment). (E, F) PC12 cells were cotransfected with GFP-Drp1/shRNA
expression plasmids and either AKAP1 cDNAs or shRNAs. Cultures were
treated 48 h posttransfection with 0.5 µM staurosporine for 24 h,
fixed, and stained with Hoechst 33342. Representative images in (E) show
overlays of cell contours (bright field), GFP-Drp1 (green), and
Hoechst-stained nuclei (blue), with transfected cells displaying normal
nuclear morphology and many untransfected cells having condensed,
apoptotic nuclei (arrows). Apoptosis was quantified as the percentage of
GFP-positive cells with condensed or fragmented nuclei (E, means
± s.e.m. of 6–13 image fields with ∼300 transfected
cells per condition from one experiment representative of three).Next, we investigated the role of Drp1 phosphorylation in AKAP1-mediated
mitochondrial fusion. For this set of experiments, HeLa cells expressing empty
vector, wild-type, or PKA binding-deficient AKAP1 in addition to wild-type or
SPKAA-mutant Drp1 were treated with forskolin/rolipram to
activate PKA. As in neuronal cells, AKAP1 promoted mitochondrial network
formation that depended on recruitment of PKA.Furthermore, PKA/AKAP1-induced mitochondrial elongation was nearly abolished when
endogenous Drp1 was replaced with the Ser→Ala mutant (Figure 7C,D).We confirmed an epistatic relationship between AKAP1 and Drp1SerPKA
in primary hippocampal neurons. Substitution of endogenous with
Ser→Ala-mutant Drp1 resulted in mitochondrial fragmentation, whereas the
Ser→Asp mutant caused mitochondrial elongation as assessed in dendrites
(form factor: Figure S8B; length: Figure S8C). Co-expression of wild-type AKAP1
lengthened dendritic mitochondria in wild-type GFP-Drp1 substituted neurons, but
not in neurons expressing either SerPKA mutant. Neurons were
unresponsive to AKAP1 ΔPKA transfection (Figure S8).
These experiments indicate that PKA/AKAP1 inhibits mitochondrial fission by
phosphorylating Drp1 at SerPKA.AKAP1 has previously been reported to promote phosphorylation of the proapoptotic
Bcl2 family member Bad in PC12 cells, and Bad phosphorylation and cytosolic
sequestration was proposed to underlie the neuroprotective effect of PKA/AKAP1
[24].
To examine whether Drp1 may instead be the critical prosurvival substrate of
PKA/AKAP1, we challenged transiently transfected PC12 cells with the classical
apoptosis inducer staurosporine, a broad-spectrum kinase inhibitor previously
shown to dephosphorylate Drp1 at SerPKA
[18]. Compared
to AKAP1 ΔPKA or scrambled shRNA, overexpression of wild-type AKAP1
significantly attenuated apoptosis induced by staurosporine (0.5 µM for 24
h) when endogenous Drp1 was replaced with wild-type GFP-Drp1. Replacement with
Ser→Ala mutant Drp1, instead, negated the antiapoptotic effect of AKAP1
(Figure 7E,F).
Conversely, AKAP1 knockdown in wild-type GFP-Drp1 expressing cells moderately
increased the percentage with apoptotic nuclei compared to scrambled shRNA.
Pseudophosphorylated (S→D mutant) Drp1 overcame the proapoptotic effect of
AKAP1 shRNA, reducing staurosporine-induced apoptosis to levels comparable to
AKAP1 overexpression (Figure
7E,F). These results provide strong evidence that AKAP1 acts through
Drp1 (and not Bad) to inhibit the intrinsic apoptosis cascade in PC12 cells.
SerPKA Phosphorylation by PKA/AKAP1 Assembles Drp1 Into Large,
Slowly Recycling Mitochondrial Complexes
FRAP and subcellular fractionation experiments so far suggest that AKAP1 recruits
PKA to phosphorylate Drp1 at the OMM, which inhibits the membrane scission
activity of Drp1 by trapping the protein in slow-turnover complexes (Figure 5). We returned to FRAP
experiments in HeLa cells to establish a requirement for PKA binding to AKAP1
and SerPKA phosphorylation of Drp1 in this process. Compared to
AKAP1ΔPKA, co-expression of wild-type AKAP1 significantly slowed
fluorescence recovery of mitochondrial GFP-Drp1 (>3-fold increase in
t1/2; Figure
8A–C, Video S1). Furthermore, as seen in
forskolin/rolipram-stimulated PC12 cells, wild-type AKAP1 expression resulted in
a shift of GFP-Drp1 localization from cytosol to mitochondria (Figure 8A). In striking
contrast, PKA site-mutant (SPKAA) GFP-Drp1 was completely insensitive
to PKA/AKAP1 recruitment, displaying rapid recovery comparable to wild-type Drp1
cotransfected with AKAP1ΔPKA (Figure 8A,C).
Figure 8
PKA/AKAP1 recruits Drp1 into large, slow turnover complexes by
phosphorylating SerPKA.
(A–C) HeLa cells co-expressing wild-type or SPKAA-mutant
GFP-Drp1 and either wild-type or PKA-binding deficient (ΔPKA) AKAP1
were subjected to FRAP analysis. (A) Frames showing time lapse series of
representative cells (green: GFP-Drp1, red: MitoTracker Deep Red) with
enlargements of the 180 s frame demonstrating recovery of Drp1 into
mitochondrial foci (arrows). (B) Average recovery curves of cells
expressing wild-type GFP-Drp1 and either wild-type or mutant AKAP1, and
(C) plots mitochondrial Drp1 turnover as the 50% recovery time
calculated from biexponential fits of individual recovery curves
(R
2∼0.992; means ± s.e.m. of
5–9 cells each from a representative experiment). (D) COS cells
cotransfected with Drp1 and either omGFP or omPKA were treated for 5 min
with the indicated concentration of the reversible, membrane permeant
crosslinker dithiobismaleimidoethane (DTME), and cleared cell lysates
were subjected to ultracentrifugation to sediment Drp1 complexes.
PKA/AKAP1 recruits Drp1 into large, slow turnover complexes by
phosphorylating SerPKA.
(A–C) HeLa cells co-expressing wild-type or SPKAA-mutant
GFP-Drp1 and either wild-type or PKA-binding deficient (ΔPKA) AKAP1
were subjected to FRAP analysis. (A) Frames showing time lapse series of
representative cells (green: GFP-Drp1, red: MitoTracker Deep Red) with
enlargements of the 180 s frame demonstrating recovery of Drp1 into
mitochondrial foci (arrows). (B) Average recovery curves of cells
expressing wild-type GFP-Drp1 and either wild-type or mutant AKAP1, and
(C) plots mitochondrial Drp1 turnover as the 50% recovery time
calculated from biexponential fits of individual recovery curves
(R
2∼0.992; means ± s.e.m. of
5–9 cells each from a representative experiment). (D) COS cells
cotransfected with Drp1 and either omGFP or omPKA were treated for 5 min
with the indicated concentration of the reversible, membrane permeant
crosslinker dithiobismaleimidoethane (DTME), and cleared cell lysates
were subjected to ultracentrifugation to sediment Drp1 complexes.Cytosolic Drp1 is a tetramer, which upon translocation to the OMM is thought to
oligomerize into spiral or ring-shaped superstructures. In analogy to dynamin,
GTP hydrolysis may trigger disassembly of Drp1 oligomers and concomitant
membrane fission [28]. In order to provide evidence that outer
mitochondrial PKA promotes SerPKA-dependent oligomerization of Drp1,
we performed crosslinking experiments with dithiobismaleimidoethane (DTME), a
membrane-permeant, reversible, and Cys-reactive crosslinker. Transfected COS
cells were crosslinked in vivo, and cell lysates were subjected to
ultracentrifugation (300,000 x g) to assess Drp1 assembly into large,
sedimentable complexes. Compared to co-expression of OMM-targeted GFP,
OMM-targeted PKA enhanced oligomerization of wild-type but not
SerPKA-mutant Drp1 (Figure 8D), providing a biochemical correlate for the slowly
recycling, mitochondrial Drp1 pool we observed in our FRAP experiments.
GTPase-Impairment Phenocopies Phosphorylation of Drp1
How does PKA/AKAP1-mediated phosphorylation stabilize Drp1 oligomers at the OMM?
SerPKA phosphorylation was previously shown to inhibit intrinsic
GTP hydrolysis by Drp1 [19]. Dnm1, the yeast ortholog of Drp1, assembles into
fission-competent complexes in its GTP-bound state, but assembly also stimulates
GTP hydrolysis, effectively limiting the size of Dnm1 oligomers at the OMM [28].
Therefore, an attractively simple hypothesis compatible with our observations is
that PKA/AKAP1 phosphorylation of Drp1 attenuates GTP hydrolysis, thereby
allowing Drp1 oligomers to grow beyond a size that is compatible with membrane
remodeling.This hypothesis predicts that GTPase-impaired Drp1 mutants should behave
similarly to phospho-SerPKADrp1. We initially analyzed the widely
used dominant-negative K38A mutant of Drp1, which affects a critical Lys residue
in the nucleotide binding fold. However, Drp1K38A was found to localize
exclusively in large spherical aggregates that only occasionally overlapped with
mitochondria and that did not exchange with one another as detectable by FRAP
analysis (unpublished data). Aiming for a milder phenotype, we targeted Thr55 in
the Drp1 GTPase domain (Figure
9A) based on a mutagenesis study of the related dynamin-2. Ser61, the
corresponding residue in dynamin-2, lies within the nucleotide binding pocket
but does not directly coordinate GTP [29]. Mutation of Ser61 to Asp
was shown to significantly lower the maximal rate of GTP hydrolysis
(Kcat) without affecting the Km or apparent affinity
of dynamin-2 for GTP [30].
Figure 9
A GTPase-compromised Drp1 mutant accumulates in slowly recycling
complexes at mitochondria.
(A) Drp1 domain diagram. (B–C) Endogenous Drp1 in HeLa cells was
replaced by transfection of the indicated ratios of wild-type (WT) and
T55D mutant GFP-Drp1 expression plasmids. Cells were fixed and analyzed
for mitochondrial length and Drp1 colocalization with mitochondria using
ImageJ software [22],[61]. (B) Representative
images showing punctate localization of GFP-Drp1 T55D (green) on
mitochondria (cytochrome oxidase subunit II antibody). (C) Correlation
between mitochondrial length and mitochondrial localization of Drp1 as a
function of Drp1 T55D expression (means ± s.e.m. of ∼200
cells per condition from a representative experiment). Wild-type and
T55D-mutant Drp1 expression levels are similar and scale with plasmid
amounts (inset). (D, E) Turnover of GFP-Drp1 WT and T55D was analyzed by
FRAP as in Figure 8.
(D) Frames showing representative time lapse series (green: GFP-Drp1,
red: MitoTracker Deep Red, see Video S2) of HeLa cells expressing
100% WT or T55D Drp1, with the last frame expanded to show
recovery of WT Drp1 into mitochondrial foci (arrows). (E) Average
recovery curves (left) and curve fit-derived turnover (right, ratio of
mobile fraction [mFx] and 50% recovery time
[t1/2]) from cells expressing varying ratios of
WT and T55D-mutant GFP-Drp1 (mean ± s.e.m. of 12–20 cells
each from a representative experiment). (F) COS cells expressing
GFP-Drp1 WT or T55D were incubated with DTME (5 min, 500 µM), and
cleared cell lysates were subjected to ultracentrifugation to sediment
Drp1 complexes (∼2-fold increase with the T55D mutation).
A GTPase-compromised Drp1 mutant accumulates in slowly recycling
complexes at mitochondria.
(A) Drp1 domain diagram. (B–C) Endogenous Drp1 in HeLa cells was
replaced by transfection of the indicated ratios of wild-type (WT) and
T55D mutant GFP-Drp1 expression plasmids. Cells were fixed and analyzed
for mitochondrial length and Drp1 colocalization with mitochondria using
ImageJ software [22],[61]. (B) Representative
images showing punctate localization of GFP-Drp1T55D (green) on
mitochondria (cytochrome oxidase subunit II antibody). (C) Correlation
between mitochondrial length and mitochondrial localization of Drp1 as a
function of Drp1T55D expression (means ± s.e.m. of ∼200
cells per condition from a representative experiment). Wild-type and
T55D-mutant Drp1 expression levels are similar and scale with plasmid
amounts (inset). (D, E) Turnover of GFP-Drp1 WT and T55D was analyzed by
FRAP as in Figure 8.
(D) Frames showing representative time lapse series (green: GFP-Drp1,
red: MitoTracker Deep Red, see Video S2) of HeLa cells expressing
100% WT or T55DDrp1, with the last frame expanded to show
recovery of WT Drp1 into mitochondrial foci (arrows). (E) Average
recovery curves (left) and curve fit-derived turnover (right, ratio of
mobile fraction [mFx] and 50% recovery time
[t1/2]) from cells expressing varying ratios of
WT and T55D-mutant GFP-Drp1 (mean ± s.e.m. of 12–20 cells
each from a representative experiment). (F) COS cells expressing
GFP-Drp1 WT or T55D were incubated with DTME (5 min, 500 µM), and
cleared cell lysates were subjected to ultracentrifugation to sediment
Drp1 complexes (∼2-fold increase with the T55D mutation).To assess the effect of the T55D mutation on mitochondrial morphology, HeLa cells
were transfected with different ratios of wild-type and T55D-mutant GFP-Drp1
plasmid (replacing endogenous Drp1 by RNAi from the same plasmid). Drp1T55D
expression resulted in a dose-dependent increase in mitochondrial length,
demonstrating that the mutation impairs Drp1's fission activity (Figure 9B,C). Remarkably,
GFP-Drp1T55D also displayed a more pronounced, punctate mitochondrial
localization than wild-type Drp1 (Figure 9B). Quantitative analysis confirmed that GFP-Drp1
colocalization with mitochondria (Manders' coefficient) was positively
correlated with relative expression levels of Drp1T55D, as well as with
mitochondrial length (Figure
9C). Further FRAP analysis demonstrated that the T55D substitution
dramatically attenuates mitochondrial Drp1 dynamics, again in a dose-dependent
manner, slowing turnover by up to 10-fold (Figure 9D,E; Video S2).
Similar to phosphorylation at SerPKA, the T55D mutation also
increased the propensity of Drp1 to form sedimentable oligomeric structures
after intact cell crosslinking (Figure 9F).Therefore, inhibition of GTP hydrolysis (either by mutation of the GTPase domain
or by phosphorylation of SerPKA by PKA/AKAP1) leads to a stable
accumulation of Drp1 at mitochondria, likely by interfering with a disassembly
step that is required for mitochondrial fission.
PKA Phosphorylation and T55D Substitution Extend the Lifetime of
Mitochondrial Drp1 Foci
In an effort to provide direct evidence that PKA phosphorylation slows the
turnover of mitochondrial Drp1 complexes, we imaged HeLa cells expressing
GFP-Drp1 and mitochondrial dsRed2 at high magnification (630×). Wild-type
GFP-Drp1 foci were mostly found to abut mitochondria, seemingly randomly
translocating along their length and pivoting around the organelle (Figure 10A, Video S3).
Mitochondrial fission events were observed only at sites of GFP-Drp1
accumulation, and GFP-Drp1 punctae frequently divided to segregate with the new
mitochondrial ends. When PKA was co-expressed, GFP-Drp1 punctae appeared larger
and less dynamic, and the frequency of mitochondrial fragmentation events
decreased. Foci formed by GTPase-impaired, T55D mutant Drp1 displayed a similar
albeit even more accentuated behavior, which correlated with the near absence of
fission events during the 1 h recording period (Figure 10A, Video
S3).
Figure 10
PKA phosphorylation and T55D mutation prolong the lifetime of
mitochondrial Drp1 foci.
(A, B) HeLa cells transfected with GFP-Drp1 (green), dsRed2/mito (COX8
matrix targeting sequence, red), ± PKA catalytic subunit were
imaged for ≥1 h at 37°C, capturing images every 30 s. (A)
Representative frames of time lapse series (see Video
S3). Blue lines connect GFP-Drp1 punctae that could be
tracked for at least 5 min; x symbols denote mitochondrial fission
events. Note that GFP-Drp1 punctae often split with the fragmenting
mitochondrion. (B) Cumulative frequency plot of Drp1 punctae lifetimes
and average lifetimes (bar graph inset; means ± s.e.m. of
35–62 cells and 11,000 to 40,000 punctae per condition from two
independent experiments). (C) Model of mitochondrial fusion by
PKA/AKAP1. GTP-bound Drp1 translocates to mitochondria to assemble into
oligomeric complexes. Drp1 assembly stimulates GTP hydrolysis, leading
to mitochondrial fission and release of Drp1 into the cytosol to
complete the cycle. OMM-anchored PKA/AKAP1 phosphorylates Drp1 at
SerPKA, stabilizing the GTP-bound state to promote growth
of Drp1 complexes to a size that is incompatible with membrane scission.
Protein phosphatases (PP), including calcineurin, dephosphorylate Drp1
SerPKA to return Drp1 into its active, rapidly cycling
state.
PKA phosphorylation and T55D mutation prolong the lifetime of
mitochondrial Drp1 foci.
(A, B) HeLa cells transfected with GFP-Drp1 (green), dsRed2/mito (COX8
matrix targeting sequence, red), ± PKA catalytic subunit were
imaged for ≥1 h at 37°C, capturing images every 30 s. (A)
Representative frames of time lapse series (see Video
S3). Blue lines connect GFP-Drp1 punctae that could be
tracked for at least 5 min; x symbols denote mitochondrial fission
events. Note that GFP-Drp1 punctae often split with the fragmenting
mitochondrion. (B) Cumulative frequency plot of Drp1 punctae lifetimes
and average lifetimes (bar graph inset; means ± s.e.m. of
35–62 cells and 11,000 to 40,000 punctae per condition from two
independent experiments). (C) Model of mitochondrial fusion by
PKA/AKAP1. GTP-bound Drp1 translocates to mitochondria to assemble into
oligomeric complexes. Drp1 assembly stimulates GTP hydrolysis, leading
to mitochondrial fission and release of Drp1 into the cytosol to
complete the cycle. OMM-anchored PKA/AKAP1 phosphorylates Drp1 at
SerPKA, stabilizing the GTP-bound state to promote growth
of Drp1 complexes to a size that is incompatible with membrane scission.
Protein phosphatases (PP), including calcineurin, dephosphorylate Drp1SerPKA to return Drp1 into its active, rapidly cycling
state.Movies were subjected to automated particle tracking analysis [31],
extracting average lifetimes of mitochondria-associated GFP-Drp1 punctae at
37°C. Wild-type Drp1 punctae could be tracked for an average of 3.5 min,
whereas co-expression of PKA or the T55D mutation increased the persistence of
GFP-Drp1 punctae to 5.4 and 6.7 min, respectively (Figure 10B).
Discussion
This report establishes a role for outer mitochondrial PKA and, in particular, the
PKA/AKAP1 complex in the maintenance of mitochondrial integrity and the protection
from neuronal injury. The importance of cAMP/PKA signaling in cell survival is well
documented [26]. Phosphorylation and inactivation of Bad, a pro-apoptotic
Bcl2-family protein, has been put forward as one of the critical survival promoting
substrates of mitochondria-localized PKA [32],[33]. While AKAP1 expression in PC12
cells was shown to increase Bad phosphorylation at multiple sites [24], our results
indicate that Bad phosphorylation does not significantly contribute to the
anti-apoptotic function of AKAP1. Instead, we present evidence that PKA targeting
via AKAP1 opposes cell death mainly by gating Drp1-dependent mitochondrial fission.
Specifically, inhibition of endogenous PKA via OMM-targeted PKI leads to
mitochondrial fragmentation and sensitizes neurons to pro-apoptotic stimuli, both of
which are reversed by blocking the mitochondrial fission machinery. Conversely,
recruiting PKA to mitochondria via expression of AKAP1 resulted in mitochondrial
elongation in cell culture and in vivo and protected hippocampal neurons from
rotenonetoxicity. Both mitochondrial elongation and survival enhancement by AKAP1
required PKA anchoring and SerPKA-phosphorylatable Drp1, indicating a
critical role for the PKA-Drp1 axis.However, our results do not rule out the possibility that PKA may cause mitochondrial
elongation by promoting mitochondrial fusion events in addition to inhibiting
mitochondrial division. For instance, a recent report showed that forskolin can
stimulate mitochondrial fusion in a cell-free assay [34].AKAP1 is a large, multifunctional adaptor protein with several splice variants and a
highly conserved N-terminal transmembrane domain that acts as a mitochondrial
targeting sequence [35]. Besides localizing the PKA holoenzyme, AKAP1 also
interacts with the tyrosine phosphatase PTPD1, and through PTPD1 with the tyrosine
kinase Src, as well as two Ser/Thr phosphatases, PP1 and PP2B [36]–[38]. The C-terminus of AKAP1
contains Tudor and KH RNA binding domains, which were suggested to localize
nucleus-derived mRNAs encoding mitochondrial proteins close to their destination
[39].A recent study described nuclear aggregation of mitochondria upon overexpressing an
N-terminal fragment of AKAP1 containing the PKA binding domain. The authors did not,
however, investigate whether this effect was PKA dependent and instead attributed
the phenotype to a lack of RNA binding to the missing C terminus [37]. In the present
study, we consistently observed elongation but rarely nuclear aggregation of
mitochondria, regardless of whether full-length or C-terminally truncated AKAP1
(residues 1–524) was expressed. High levels of AKAP1 overexpression did
sometimes induce nuclear aggregation of mitochondria, which may therefore be
secondary to exaggerated fusion of the organelle. Mitochondrial remodeling depended
on an intact PKA binding domain and was phenocopied and reversed by direct OMM
tethering of PKA and PKI, respectively. Thus, PKA targeting is both necessary and
sufficient for AKAP1-dependent regulation of mitochondrial morphogenesis.Both the PKA and the PTPD1/Src interaction domains are important for maintenance of
mitochondrial membrane potential by AKAP1 [40]. Hence, either mitochondrial
recruitment of PTPD1/Src or an as yet undefined structural role of AKAP1 may explain
why mitochondrial fission inhibitors rescue hippocampal neurons from omPKI
expression but not from AKAP1 knockdown.Consistent with an essential role for AKAP1 in neuronal survival, a recent report
demonstrated that ischemia induces expression of the E3 ubiquitin ligase Seven
In-Absentia Homolog 2 (Siah2), which targets AKAP1 for rapid proteasomal degradation
[41]. Our
study predicts that the hypoxia-induced loss of PKA anchoring at the OMM leads to
disinhibition of Drp1 and contributes to the massive mitochondrial fragmentation
that is a hallmark of ischemic brain injury [42].We have identified a conserved PKA phosphorylation site in the GTPase effector domain
of Drp1 as the principal mediator of PKA/AKAP1-induced mitochondrial remodeling.
AKAP1-mediated redistribution of PKA was shown to augment Drp1SerPKA
phosphorylation, and mitochondria of cells expressing
SerPKAAla-substituted Drp1 were unresponsive to cAMP and PKA/AKAP1. As to
a mechanism, Drp1 activation via AKAP1 silencing was associated with accelerated
cycling of the fission enzyme between cytosolic and mitochondrial pools. Conversely,
Drp1 inhibition via cAMP or PKA recruitment or overexpression resulted in the
accumulation of stable Drp1 oligomers at mitochondria and in an extension of the
lifetime of mitochondrial Drp1 foci. Because SerPKA phosphorylation
decreased the Kcat of GTP hydrolysis and because a mutation that
stabilizes the GTP bound form of Drp1 mimicked the effects of PKA phosphorylation on
localization and dynamics of the fission enzyme, modulation of Drp1's GTP cycle
emerges as a probable mechanism for the mitochondria-stabilizing and neuroprotective
actions of PKA/AKAP1.A previous FRAP study demonstrated that the apoptosis inducer staurosporine causes
accumulation of slowly recycling mitochondrial YFP-Drp1 complexes, which colocalize
with Bax and Bak. Since the arrest of Drp1 cycling occurs after mitochondria have
fragmented but before they release cytochrome C, this phenomenon may be related to
the proapoptotic christae remodeling activity of Drp1 [43]. Given that the pan-kinase
inhibitor staurosporine actually inhibits Drp1 phosphorylation at SerPKA
[18],
mitochondrial accumulation of Drp1 during apoptosis likely occurs by a mechanism
distinct from the one reported here, such as Drp1 sumoylation ([43],[44], but see [45]).Seemingly at odds with our findings, another study previously suggested that
calcineurin-mediated dephosphorylation of Drp1 at SerPKA promotes
translocation of the fission enzyme to mitochondria, a conclusion largely based on
overexpression of phosphorylation site-mutant Drp1 [17]. Confirming and extending
the findings of that report, we found that pseudophosphorylated
(SPKAD-mutant) GFP-Drp1 partitions mostly with the cytosolic fraction
(>90%), oligomerizes less readily than wild-type Drp1, and only
infrequently forms mitochondrial punctae (unpublished data), which is essentially
opposite to the phenotype of Drp1 phosphorylated by PKA. Because Asp substitution of
Drp1SerPKA at most incompletely reproduces the inhibitory effect of
SerPKA phosphorylation on in vitro GTP hydrolysis [17]–[19], we propose that
the supposedly phosphomimetic substitution of SerPKA with an acidic
residue locks Drp1 into a partially inhibited state, arresting the enzyme at a
different stage of its subcellular translocation cycle.Enhanced colocalization or cofractionation of Drp1 with mitochondria has previously
been interpreted as evidence for Drp1 activation (e.g. [17],[20],[46]). Our data and those of Zunino et
al. [44] argue
that Drp1 regulation is more complex, in that mitochondria-associated pools of Drp1
may sometimes be inactive. Similar considerations apply to higher order oligomeric
assembly of Drp1, which is clearly required for its function as a mechanoenzyme
[28]. The
crosslinking and particle tracking data presented here indicate that excessive
oligomerization of Drp1 into particles unable to constrict and sever mitochondria
occurs as a consequence of SerPKA phosphorylation or mutation of the
GTPase domain.In support of a model in which PKA/AKAP1 fuses mitochondria by accumulating Drp1 in
inactive superstructures (Figure
10C), recent studies on the mechanism of action of dynamin suggest that
the endocytosis motor assembles into relatively short oligomers (3 to 4 rungs of a
spiral) before GTP hydrolysis-driven disassembly leads to membrane destabilization
and scission. In contrast, disassembly of larger dynamin oligomers (assembled in the
absence of GTP) does not effectively mediate membrane scission [47],[48].Outer mitochondrial PKA-induced super-oligomerization of Drp1 could inhibit cell
death by several, non-mutually exclusive mechanisms. For instance, mitochondrial
networks resulting from unopposed fusion can sustain higher metabolic activity [49], are relatively
resistant to Bax insertion and cytochrome C release [50], and may also be more effective
at sequestering cytotoxic calcium and reactive oxygen species [51],[52]. More directly, PKA-mediated
depletion of the cytosolic Drp1 pool could potentially interfere with pathological
Drp1 activation by sumoylation [43] and nitrosylation [15] and compete with Drp1 recruitment
into Bax/Bak positive foci during apoptosis [53]. The interplay between
multi-site phosphorylation and other posttranslational modifications of Drp1 in the
regulation of mitochondrial homeostasis and cell death is undoubtedly complex and
will require further attention.
Materials and Methods
Antibodies
The following antibodies were used: rabbit anti-GFP (ab290, Abcam), mouseIgG1 anti-MTCO2 (cytochrome oxidase subunit II, Neomarkers),
rabbit anti-ERK (Santa Cruz), mouse anti-phospho-SerPKADrp1 [22], rabbit
anti-phospho-SerCDKDrp1 (Ser616, Cell Signaling), rabbit
anti-LacZ and mouseIgG2a anti-V5 epitope tag (Invitrogen), mouse
anti-neurofilament (2H3, Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, Iowa City), and
mouse anti-MAP2B (BD Transduction Laboratories). For immunofluorescence
staining, Alexa fluorophore-coupled secondary antibodies were purchased from
Invitrogen. Infrared fluorophore-coupled secondary antibodies for quantitative
immunoblot analysis were purchased from LI-COR Biosciences (Lincoln, NE).
cDNA and shRNA Vectors
The core domain of ratAKAP1 that is present in all published splice variants
(residues 1–524) was isolated by reverse transcriptase PCR and fused to
the N terminus of EGFP. The PKA-binding deficient mutant I310P, L316P was
generated by mutagenesis according to the QuikChange protocol (Stratagene).
N-terminally GFP tagged PKA, PKI [54], and PfARP32–239
[55] were
modified by the addition of N-terminal OMM targeting sequences: hexokinase
I1–30 for PKA and MAS70p1–29 for PKI. For
the V5-tagged AKAP1 constructs, the AKAP1 cDNA was excised from the GFP
constructs with BglII and SalI and ligated into the pcDNA3.1HisV5 vector
digested with BamHI and XhoI. AKAP1 and Fis1 were silenced by H1-promoter-driven
expression of shRNAs [56] (pSUPER plasmid [57] or lentivirus [58]).
19 b target sites in the mRNAs were (numbering relative to translation start
site in rat mRNAs): AKAP1/#1: 780–788, AKAP1/#4: 740–758, Fis1/#3:
315–333, Fis1/#4: 421–439. The nonspecific control shRNA had a
similar base composition but was randomized for no more than 14 consecutive
matches to any mammalian mRNA. The Fis1 and control shRNAs were described
previously [21]. Drp1 expression plasmids encoded rat splice variant 1
with an N-terminal EGFP tag under CMV promoter control, as well as Drp1-directed
shRNA driven by the H1 promoter [18]. GFP-Drp1 was rendered RNAi resistant and coding
mutations were incorporated by site-directed mutagenesis [18]. All Drp1 transfection
experiments in this article involved concomitant silencing of the endogenous
protein.
Western Blot and Immunoprecipitation
For analysis of Drp1 phosphorylation, COS cells were cotransfected with
GFP-tagged AKAP1 and Drp1 at 2∶3 plasmid mass ratios using Lipofectamine
2000. After 24 h, cells were stimulated with various concentrations of
forskolin/rolipram for 45 min, lysed in SDS sample buffer containing 2 mM EDTA
and 1 µM microcystin, and sonicated with a probe tip to shear DNA. For
AKAP1 immunoprecipitation, PC12 cells were transfected with AKAP1 WT- or
AKAP1ΔPKA-GFP. After 48 h, AKAP1 was immunoprecipitated with GFP antibodies
and protein A-agarose beads essentially as described [59]. Protein samples were
resolved on 8% or 10% polyacrylamide gels and transferred to
nitrocellulose membrane, followed by antibody detection using a LI-COR Odyssey
infrared fluorescence scanner. Band intensities were quantified using the ImageJ
gel analysis macro set, normalizing to loading controls in the same lane.
Intact Cell Crosslinking
COS cells were transfected with triple HA-tagged Drp1 and either omGFP or omPKA
expressing plasmids at 3∶1 mass ratio and cultured for 24 h. After a wash
with PBS, cells were incubated with HBSS containing up to 0.5 mM
dithiobismaleimidoethane (DTME, from freshly prepared 50× stocks in DMSO)
for 5 min at 37°C. The HBSS/DTME was removed and cells were lysed in buffer
containing 60 mM Tris pH 6.8 and 2% SDS. Insoluble debris was removed by
centrifugation (10 min at 14,000 x g) and cleared lysates (300 µl) were
layered onto 1 ml of a 300 mM sucrose cushion and subjected to
ultracentrifugation (30 min at 300,000 x g). Pellets were dissolved in SDS
sample buffer containing 5% β-mercaptoethanol to cleave the
crosslinker and analyzed by SDS-PAGE alongside an aliquot of the lysate prior to
ultracentrifugation.
Neuronal Survival Assays
Hippocampal neurons from E18 rat embryos [60] were cultured in Neurobasal
medium with B27 supplement (Gibco) and transduced with lentivirus or transfected
using LipofectAmine 2000 (0.15%, 2 µg/ml DNA) at 10–21 d in
vitro. For survival assays based on counting transfected neurons or apoptotic
nuclei, GFP- or β-galactosidase-expressing plasmids were cotransfected.
After 3 to 5 d, cultures were challenged with rotenone (400 nM continuous) and
fixed with 3.7% paraformaldehyde and processed for immunofluorescence
staining for the transfection marker (αGFP and αLacZ) and neurofilament
protein as a neuronal marker (2H3). To score survival, transfection
marker-positive neurons with intact processes were counted in quadruplicate
wells of a 24-well plate. Apoptosis was quantified as the percentage of
transfected neurons with condensed, irregular, or fragmented nuclei (labeled
with 1 µg/ml Hoechst 33342). All survival assays based on counting neurons
were performed blind to the experimental conditions.
Mitochondrial Morphology Assays in Cell Culture
HeLa cells, PC12 cells, and hippocampal neurons cultured on, respectively,
untreated, collagen-, and poly-D-lysine-coated, chambered No. 1 cover glasses
(20 mm2 chamber, Nalge Nunc) were infected with lentivirus or
transfected using LipofectAmine 2000 as above. Hippocampal cultures were
infected or transfected at 8 to 10 d in vitro and analyzed 3 to 5 d later. For
live cell imaging 24 to 96 h post-transfection, cells were incubated with 100 nM
TMRM for 30 min at 37°C to visualize mitochondria, and images through the
midplane of the soma were captured using a Zeiss LSM 510 laser-scanning confocal
microscope. For analysis of fixed cells, cultures were subjected to
immunofluorescence staining with antibodies to cytochrome oxidase II (HeLa cells
only) and GFP [22], and images were captured with a Leica
epifluorescence microscope.Mitochondrial morphology was scored by reference image-based and software-based
methods. For the former, coded images were assigned scores from 0 to 4 by
comparison to a set of reference images with increasing degrees of mitochondrial
elongation and clustering (Figure S1A). For automated morphometry,
images were processed using ImageJ software and plugins, involving either
“rolling ball” background subtraction or deblurring by 2-D
deconvolution with a computed point spread function. Using a custom-written
ImageJ macro, processed images were converted to binary (black and white) images
by auto-thresholding, and mitochondrial particles were analyzed for length,
width, area (a), and perimeter (p) [22]. Metrics that reliably
reported the effects of manipulating components of the mitochondrial
fission/fusion machinery (e.g. wild-type or dominant-negative Drp1 expression,
Fis1 or Drp1 RNAi) included form factor (p2/(4π*a)) and
cumulative area:perimeter ratio (Σa/Σp). The form factor is reported as
an average of all particles in a region-of-interest (ROI), has a minimum value
of 1 (for perfect circles), and captures well the transition from punctiform to
elongated, complex shaped, but still isolated mitochondria. The cumulative
area:perimeter ratio is computed as the summed particle area in a ROI divided by
the summed particle perimeter (including the perimeter of enclosed spaces or
“holes”). This metric is particularly effective at detecting the
transition from elongated, isolated mitochondria to a reticular network of
interconnected mitochondria. Colocalization of GFP-Drp1 with mitochondria (Figure 9C) was quantified as
the Manders' coefficient using the JaCoP plug-in for ImageJ [61].
In Vivo Mitochondrial Morphology Analysis
All animal procedures were approved and carried out according to the
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) at the University of Iowa.
Adult male Lewis rats were anesthetized with 91/9.1 mg/kg of ketamine/xylazine
and placed in a stereotaxic apparatus. Concentrated stocks (∼108
particles/ml) of lentivirus (feline immunodeficiency virus), prepared by the
University of Iowa Viral Vector Core, were bilaterally injected into the
striatum and hippocampus using a 10 µl Hamilton syringe with a 30°
beveled 30 gauge needle. Virus expressing mitochondria-targeted GFP (via
residues 1–31 of cytochrome oxidase subunit VIII) and AKAP1-GFP were
delivered into the left and right hemisphere, respectively. The following
coordinates were used with the incisor bar at 3.3 (from bregma): Striatum,
AP = 0, ML = ±3.5,
DV = −4.5; Hippocampus,
AP = −4.0, ML = ±2.0,
DV = −3.5. Animals were sacrificed 7–14 d later
and transcardially perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde. 40 µm thick
coronal cryostat sections were processed for indirect immunofluorescence with
antibodies to GFP and MAP2B and counterstained for nuclei with TOPRO-3. Ten to
22 confocal z-sections of infected neurons, 0.8 µm apart, were captured
and analyzed for mitochondrial shape by digital morphometry as described
above.
Fluorescence Recovery after Photobleaching
Hela and PC12 cells were grown on collagen-coated, chambered No. 1 cover glasses
(Nunc, Thermo Fisher), transfected 24 to 48 h, and stained with MitoTracker Deep
Red 30 min prior to analysis. Cells with non-mitochondrial GFP-Drp1 aggregates,
a sign of overexpression, were excluded from the analysis. Using the 488 nm
laser line of a Zeiss LSM 510 confocal microscope, an approx. 5×5 µm
region of mitochondria-associated GFP-Drp1 was bleached and fluorescence
recovery was tracked by capturing images every 5 s for 5 min. Image stacks were
analyzed, and recovery curves normalized to pre-bleach intensity and corrected
for acquisition bleach [27] were approximated by single and double exponential
recovery equations using a custom-written ImageJ macro, yielding 50%
recovery time constant (t1/2) and mobile fraction (mFx). Drp1
dynamics followed double exponential recovery kinetics with
R
2 values of generally greater than 0.99.
Control experiments, in which bleach recovery of cytosolic and mitochondrial
Drp1 was tracked separately by masking the GFP channel with the MitoTracker
channel, showed that mitochondrial masking does not significantly affect the
results (unpublished data).
GFP-Drp1 Particle Tracking
HeLa cells cotransfected with GFP-Drp1, dsRed2/mito, and either empty vector or
PKA catalytic subunit at 15∶4∶1 plasmid ratios were subjected to
time lapse imaging using the 63× objective of a motorized Leica AF6000
epifluorescence microscope under temperature (37°C) and CO2
(5%) control. Frames were captured at 30 s intervals for 60 to 90 min,
contrast-enhanced (contrast-limited adaptive histogram equalization
[CLAHE] plugin for ImageJ), and analyzed with the Particle Tracker
plugin for ImageJ [31]. Text files containing particle trajectories were
parsed with a custom-written macro to obtain mean particle lifetimes and
lifetime histograms.
Subcellular Fractionation
COS cells expressing GFP-Drp1 with or without omPKA were permeabilized in 0.5
mg/ml digitonin, 100 mM KCl, 20 mM HEPES pH 7.4, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 1 mM
benzamidine, 5 µg/ml leupeptin, 1 mM dithiotreitol (DTT), and 1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF). Cytosolic and heavy membrane fractions
were prepared by centrifugation (10 min, 20,000 x g, 4°C).
Statistical Analysis
Data were analyzed by Student's t test (two-tailed) for
single comparisons and by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by
pairwise Bonferroni post hoc tests for multiple comparisons.Reference image-based and automated methods yield similar mitochondrial
morphology scores. (A) Confocal images of TMRM-stained mitochondria in
hippocampal neurons were used as reference images for quantification of
mitochondrial morphology (increasing length scores from 0 to 4). (B, C)
Comparison of blinded reference image-based length scores (B) and digital
morphometry (C) applied to confocal images of hippocampal neurons expressing
Bβ2- or AKAP1-directed or nonsense (NS) shRNAs (means ± s.d. of
12–28 neurons). The cumulative area:perimeter ratio (Σa/Σp)
can account for mitochondrial clusters and achieves significance values
approaching that of the reference-image-based method. (D) Cell-by-cell
correlation of reference-image-based length scores and cumulative
area:perimeter ratios in neurons expressing Bβ1 or Bβ2 and Bcl2.
Small symbols represent values from individual neurons; the large symbols
are population means (± s.d.).(0.38 MB TIF)Click here for additional data file.A point mutation and two shRNAs interfere with AKAP1 function/expression and
Drp1 shRNA permits assembly of pure GFP-Drp1 oligomers. (A) Wild-type (WT)
and mutant (ΔPKA = I310P,L316P) AKAP1-GFP were
immunoprecipitated via GFP from transfected COS cells and analyzed for
association with the PKA regulatory subunit RIIα; the asterisk indicates
immunoglobulin heavy chain. (B) Hippocampal cultures were cotransfected with
a 1∶1∶2 mass ratio of plasmids expressing the indicated target
proteins fused to the N terminus of firefly luciferase (luc),
Renilla luciferase, and shRNAs (NS, nonsense).
Knockdown was assessed 3 d later by dual-luciferase assays. AKAP1-directed
shRNAs were as effective as a positive control shRNA targeting the luc
coding sequence. (C) PC12 cells transfected with the indicated shRNA
plasmids were probed for endogenous AKAP1 and ERK1/2 expression (duplicate
cultures). At least two AKAP1 splice variants are expressed in PC12 cells,
with the ∼120 kD variant predominating. (D) HeLa cells were transfected
with GFP-Drp1 expression plasmids that include (+) or exclude (−)
a H1 promoter-shRNA cassette to silence endogenous Drp1, and GFP
immunoprecipitates were probed with Drp1 antibodies. Endogenous Drp1
assembles with (RNAi-resistant) GFP-Drp1 only in the absence of
Drp1-directed shRNA.(0.25 MB TIF)Click here for additional data file.AKAP1 regulates mitochondrial shape in dendrites of hippocampal neurons.
Hippocampal cultures were transfected with mitochondrial GFP and the
indicated constructs at 1∶4 mass ratio at 10 DIV and fixed 3 d later
for analysis of mitochondrial shape in dendrites. (A) Representative
epifluorescence images and graphs (B) showing mitochondrial form factor
(mean ± s.e.m. of 40–50 neurons from a representative
experiment). p values refer to comparisons to control
(nonsense shRNA) transfected conditions.(0.26 MB TIF)Click here for additional data file.Rescue of ratAKAP1 knockdown-induced mitochondrial fragmentation by
expression of humanAKAP1. PC12 cells were cotransfected with mitochondrial
GFP, the indicated shRNAs, and either humanAKAP1 cDNA or empty vector,
fixed after 3 d, and analyzed by epifluorescence microscopy. (A)
Representative images (green, mitochondria; blue, DNA) and graphs (B)
depicting mitochondrial shape analysis from a representative experiment
(mean ± s.e.m. of 300–400 cells per condition).(1.31 MB TIF)Click here for additional data file.Neuronal death due to AKAP1 silencing cannot be rescued by inhibiting
mitochondrial fission. Hippocampal cultures were cotransfected with plasmids
expressing AKAP1-directed or control shRNAs and the indicated rescue
plasmids and analyzed after 5 d for mitochondrial morphology (A) and
apoptosis (B) (means ± s.e.m. of 3–5 experiments). Bcl2, but
neither dominant-negative Drp1 nor Fis1 RNAi, attenuates apoptosis
associated with AKAP1 knockdown.(0.14 MB TIF)Click here for additional data file.Protonophore-mediated mitochondrial fragmentation does not affect Drp1
dynamics. HeLa cells expressing GFP-Drp1 were treated with either vehicle
(basal) or 10 µM carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone
(FCCP) and 2 µM oligomycin (prevents ATP depletion due to reversal of
the F1 ATP synthase) for 1 to 4 h, during which time Drp1 turnover was
measured by FRAP. FCCP leads to dramatic mitochondrial fragmentation as
quantified by form factor (A) but has no effect on Drp1 recovery (B,
representative frames; C, average recovery curves [±
s.e.m.] from a representative experiment).(1.53 MB TIF)Click here for additional data file.AKAP1 enhances forskolin-stimulated Drp1 phosphorylation in PC12 cells. PC12
cells cotransfected with GFP-Drp1 and either empty vector, AKAP1, or AKAP1
ΔPKA were stimulated for 45 min with the indicated concentrations of
forskolin in the presence of rolipram (2 µM). Total cell lysates were
probed for phospho-SerPKADrp1 (pDrp1) and total Drp1 on the same
blot using a dual-channel infrared imager. Drp1 phosphorylation was
quantified as the ratio of phospho- to total Drp1 signals normalized to the
highest value. Shown is one experiment representative of two.(0.11 MB TIF)Click here for additional data file.Elongation of dendritic mitochondria by AKAP1 requires Drp1SerPKA. Primary hippocampal neurons cotransfected with wild-type
or SerPKA-mutant GFP-Drp1 and either vector, wild-type, or PKA
binding-deficient (ΔPKA) AKAP1 were analyzed for morphology of dendritic
mitochondria after immunofluorescence staining for the OMM-protein TOM20
(representative images in A). (B) and (C) show mitochondrial form factor and
length, respectively, from the same set of neurons (means ± s.e.m. of
12–24 neurons per condition from two culture dates).(0.36 MB TIF)Click here for additional data file.AKAP1 slows Drp1 fluorescence recovery. Coexpression with AKAP1 slows
recovery of GFP-Drp1 in the photobleached square compared to when either
protein is mutated.(0.80 MB MPG)Click here for additional data file.A mutation in the GTPase domain slows Drp1 fluorescence recovery. FRAP
kinetics of the T55D mutant are attenuated compared to wild-type
GFP-Drp1.(0.89 MB MPG)Click here for additional data file.PKA and GTPase mutation extend the lifetime of mitochondrial Drp1 punctae.
Coexpression with the PKA catalytic subunit or T55D substitution leads to
the accumulation of large GFP-Drp1 punctae that turn over more slowly than
wild-type Drp1 without PKA.(1.87 MB MPG)Click here for additional data file.
Authors: Stephan Züchner; Irina V Mersiyanova; Maria Muglia; Nisrine Bissar-Tadmouri; Julie Rochelle; Elena L Dadali; Mario Zappia; Eva Nelis; Alessandra Patitucci; Jan Senderek; Yesim Parman; Oleg Evgrafov; Peter De Jonghe; Yuji Takahashi; Shoij Tsuji; Margaret A Pericak-Vance; Aldo Quattrone; Esra Battaloglu; Alexander V Polyakov; Vincent Timmerman; J Michael Schröder; Jeffery M Vance; Esra Battologlu Journal: Nat Genet Date: 2004-04-04 Impact factor: 38.330
Authors: Hans R Waterham; Janet Koster; Carlo W T van Roermund; Petra A W Mooyer; Ronald J A Wanders; James V Leonard Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2007-04-26 Impact factor: 91.245