A dosage-sensitive ALLO-1 network coordinates mitochondrial quality control to enable functional recovery of structurally compromised muscle

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Abstract

Functional recovery of muscle can precede structural repair, yet the mechanisms enabling this dissociation remain elusive. In C. elegans, unc-45(m94) mutants recover motility after heat-induced paralysis despite persisting sarcomeric disorganisation, offering a model to dissect non-contractile drivers of early recovery. Quantitative proteomics identified ALLO-1, a selective autophagy adaptor previously characterised for mediating paternal mitochondrial elimination during embryogenesis, as strongly upregulated during the recovery phase. Proteomic and genetic analyses further revealed a network of ALLO-1-associated factors, including the kinase IKKE-1 (a known ALLO-1 activator), SIP-1 (a small heat shock protein), DIM-1 (a sarcomeric tether), and CAR-1 (an ER-associated RNA-binding protein). In adult muscle, ALLO-1 restrains mitophagy to preserve mitochondrial integrity. Its depletion triggers mitochondrial fragmentation and excessive turnover, especially in the sensitised unc-45(m94) background. Overexpression suppresses mitophagy but reduces oxidative capacity, revealing a dosage-sensitive checkpoint. While IKKE-1 and SIP-1 promote mitochondrial stability, DIM-1 and CAR-1 facilitate turnover when ALLO-1 levels fall below threshold. Together, this regulatory module integrates proteostatic, translational, and mechanical signals to safeguard mitochondrial homeostasis and enable recovery when contractile architecture is compromised.

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