A retrograde transit filter mediated by optineurin controls mitostasis in distal axons

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The mechanisms of mitochondrial homeostasis in neurons—‘mitostasis’—are enigmatic and disease-prone, given a neuron’s large synaptic pool of mitochondria. To better understand mitostasis in mature mouse motor axons, we used ex vivo optical pulse-chase measurements of mitochondrial volume flux and identified a reiterative degradation system near presynaptic terminals and distal paranodes, which accounts for 75% of mitochondrial turnover in synapses. This distal filter system captures dysfunctional mitochondria from the retrograde stream and redirects them for lysosomal degradation. It depends on optineurin, a motor neuron disease-related mitophagy adaptor, but not on PINK1 and parkin, implicating a non-canonical mitophagy pathway. In presymptomatic motor neuron disease models, where retrograde transport is disrupted, the fraction of removed mitochondria is increased. Thus, we identify a new mitostasis system in distal axons with a cascade of checkpoints for local mitophagy, which normally maintains mitochondrial mass balance but is disrupted early in degenerative axonopathies.

Article activity feed