| Literature DB >> 35356277 |
Dillon P Boulton1,2, M Cecilia Caino1.
Abstract
Mitochondria are highly dynamic organelles which can change their shape, via processes termed fission and fusion, in order to adapt to different environmental and developmental contexts. Due to the importance of these processes in maintaining a physiologically healthy pool of mitochondria, aberrant cycles of fission/fusion are often seen in pathological contexts. In this review we will discuss how dysregulated fission and fusion promote tumor progression. We focus on the molecular mechanisms involved in fission and fusion, discussing how altered mitochondrial fission and fusion change tumor cell growth, metabolism, motility, and invasion and, finally how changes to these tumor-cell intrinsic phenotypes directly and indirectly impact tumor progression to metastasis. Although this is an emerging field of investigation, the current consensus is that mitochondrial fission positively influences metastatic potential in a broad variety of tumor types. As mitochondria are now being investigated as vulnerable targets in a variety of cancer types, we underscore the importance of their dynamic nature in potentiating tumor progression.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; fission; fusion; metastasis; mitochondria; mitochondrial dynamics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35356277 PMCID: PMC8959575 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.849962
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Mitochondrial shape cycles. Mitochondria constantly undergo dynamic changes in shape by the processes of fission and fusion. These shape changes are tightly regulated to buffer stress and localize mitochondria where they are needed. Mitochondrial fusion of the outer membrane is mediated by homo- and heterodimerization of MFNs. Fusion of the inner mitochondrial membrane is mediated by OPA1. Mitochondrial fission requires DRP1 recruitment to mitochondrial fission receptors: MFF, FIS1, MiD49, and MiD51. Mitochondrial fission is primarily regulated by phosphorylation of DRP1 by upstream kinases that increase (pS616) or decrease (pS637) DRP1 affinity to the receptors. Created in BioRender.com.
FIGURE 2Effect of global mitochondrial shape on cell phenotypes. Cancer cells are often found to have fragmented mitochondria. Although mitochondrial fission and fusion undergo continuous cycles, when fission predominates this affects both mitochondrial and cell phenotypes important for the progression to metastasis. Highly fragmented pools of mitochondria can switch the metabolic phenotype of the cell and tend to accumulate at—and influence formation of—membrane protrusions including lamellipodia and invadopodia. The fragmentation of mitochondria ultimately drives increases in cell motility, invasion, and metastasis. Created in BioRender.com.
An overview of identified post-translational modifications found on commonly studied fission/fusion proteins and their effect on mitochondrial morphology and quality control.
| Post translational modification | Effect on mitochondrial shape | Mechanism | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| S616-DRP1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by ERK2 |
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| S616-DRP1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by CDK1 |
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| S616-DRP1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by CDK5 |
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| S616-DRP1 | Mitochondrial elongation | Dephosphorylation by DUSP6 |
|
| S616-DRP1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by PINK1 |
|
| S637-DRP1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Dephosphorylation by PGAM5 |
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| S637-DRP1 | Mitochondrial elongation | Phosphorylation by PKA |
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| S637-DRP1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Dephosphorylation by calcineurin |
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| S155-MFF | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by AMPK |
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| S172-MFF | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by AMPK |
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| Y38-FIS1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by MET |
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| T562-MFN1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by ERK |
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| S86-MFN1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by PKC |
|
| Ub-MFN1 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Ubiquitination by PARKIN |
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| Ub-MFN2 | Loss of ER-mitochondria contacts | Ubiquitination by PARKIN |
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| Ub-MFN2 | Decreases mitophagy | Deubiquitination by USP30 |
|
| S442-MFN2 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by PINK1 |
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| S27-MFN2 | Mitochondrial fragmentation | Phosphorylation by JNK |
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| C684-MFN2 | Mitochondrial elongation | Oxidation by GSSG |
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An overview of global changes in expression of commonly studied mitochondrial fission and fusion proteins and the effect on tumor progression. N/D (not determined in the study).
| Tumor type | Fission/Fusion protein expression | Impact on tumor progression | Model | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Increased DRP1 expression throughout tumor progression | Increased tumor cell migration and invasion | Patient samples; human cell lines |
|
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Increased DRP1 expression in metastasis vs primary tumor | High DRP1 correlated with worse relapse-free survival | Patient samples |
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| Gastric cancer | Increased FIS1 expression in cancer vs normal tissue | Patients with metastases have more FIS1 than patients without metastases | Patient samples |
|
| Melanoma | FIS1 expression positively correlated with Clark level and was higher in stage IVb/c compared to stage III and stage IVa patients | No correlation with nodal or distal metastasis | Patient samples |
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| Non-small cell lung cancer | MFF | N/D | Patient samples |
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| Ovarian cancer | Increased MiD49 expression in cancer vs normal tissue | High MiD49 expression correlated with worse overall and progression-free survival | Patient samples; human cell lines |
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| Pancreatic cancer | Decreased MiD49 expression in cancer vs normal tissue | Low MiD49 expression trends with worse overall survival ( | Patient samples; human cell lines |
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| Hepatocellular Carcinoma | Decreased MFN1 expression in metastasis vs primary tumor | Low MFN1 correlated with worse relapse-free survival | Patient samples |
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| Melanoma | MFN2 expression positively correlated with Clark level and was higher in stage IVb/c compared to stage III and stage IVa patients | High MFN2 expression is correlated with lymph node and distal metastasis | Patient samples |
|
FIGURE 3Multiple independent signaling pathways drive mitochondrial fission in metastasis. Many signaling pathways important in tumor biology also result in increased mitochondrial fission. These independent signaling pathways result in imbalanced fission/fusion cycles resulting in a highly fragmented pool of mitochondria. Stimulation of MET by HGF drives internalization of this receptor, where it directly phosphorylates FIS1. Phosphorylation of FIS1 by MET increases its affinity to DRP1, which drives mitochondrial fragmentation and tumor cell migration, invasion, and metastasis. EGF binding to EGFR also results in receptor translocation to mitochondria which blocks mitochondrial fusion. It remains unclear if this mechanism is through inhibition of MFN dimers. Overactive RAS signaling also drives mitochondrial fission through ERK1/2 dependent phosphorylation of DRP1. Created in BioRender.com.
FIGURE 4ROS in mitochondrial fission and metastasis. ROS and mitochondrial fission have a reciprocal relationship and can both drive tumor cell migration, invasion, and metastasis. Fragmented mitochondria often produce higher levels of mitochondrial and cellular ROS. Inversely, increased ROS from mitochondria with dysfunctional ETC can result in increased mitochondrial fragmentation although the mechanisms remain unclear. Created in BioRender.com.