Literature DB >> 22859372

Mitochondria-localized caveolin in adaptation to cellular stress and injury.

Heidi N Fridolfsson1, Yoshitaka Kawaraguchi, Sameh S Ali, Mathivadhani Panneerselvam, Ingrid R Niesman, J Cameron Finley, Sarah E Kellerhals, Michael Y Migita, Hideshi Okada, Ana L Moreno, Michelle Jennings, Michael W Kidd, Jacqueline A Bonds, Ravi C Balijepalli, Robert S Ross, Piyush M Patel, Atsushi Miyanohara, Qun Chen, Edward J Lesnefsky, Brian P Head, David M Roth, Paul A Insel, Hemal H Patel.   

Abstract

We show here that the apposition of plasma membrane caveolae and mitochondria (first noted in electron micrographs >50 yr ago) and caveolae-mitochondria interaction regulates adaptation to cellular stress by modulating the structure and function of mitochondria. In C57Bl/6 mice engineered to overexpress caveolin specifically in cardiac myocytes (Cav-3 OE), localization of caveolin to mitochondria increases membrane rigidity (4.2%; P<0.05), tolerance to calcium, and respiratory function (72% increase in state 3 and 23% increase in complex IV activity; P<0.05), while reducing stress-induced generation of reactive oxygen species (by 20% in cellular superoxide and 41 and 28% in mitochondrial superoxide under states 4 and 3, respectively; P<0.05) in Cav-3 OE vs. TGneg. By contrast, mitochondrial function is abnormal in caveolin-knockout mice and Caenorhabditis elegans with null mutations in caveolin (60% increase free radical in Cav-2 C. elegans mutants; P<0.05). In human colon cancer cells, mitochondria with increased caveolin have a 30% decrease in apoptotic stress (P<0.05), but cells with disrupted mitochondria-caveolin interaction have a 30% increase in stress response (P<0.05). Targeted gene transfer of caveolin to mitochondria in C57Bl/6 mice increases cardiac mitochondria tolerance to calcium, enhances respiratory function (increases of 90% state 4, 220% state 3, 88% complex IV activity; P<0.05), and decreases (by 33%) cardiac damage (P<0.05). Physical association and apparently the transfer of caveolin between caveolae and mitochondria is thus a conserved cellular response that confers protection from cellular damage in a variety of tissues and settings.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22859372      PMCID: PMC4050367          DOI: 10.1096/fj.12-215798

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FASEB J        ISSN: 0892-6638            Impact factor:   5.191


  58 in total

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