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      Deletion of PRKAA triggers mitochondrial fission by inhibiting the autophagy-dependent degradation of DNM1L

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          ABSTRACT

          PRKAA (protein kinase, AMP-activated, α catalytic subunit) regulates mitochondrial biogenesis, function, and turnover. However, the molecular mechanisms by which PRKAA regulates mitochondrial dynamics remain poorly characterized. Here, we report that PRKAA regulated mitochondrial fission via the autophagy-dependent degradation of DNM1L (dynamin 1-like). Deletion of Prkaa1/AMPKα1 or Prkaa2/AMPKα2 resulted in defective autophagy, DNM1L accumulation, and aberrant mitochondrial fragmentation in the mouse aortic endothelium. Furthermore, autophagy inhibition by chloroquine treatment or ATG7 small interfering RNA (siRNA) transfection, upregulated DNM1L expression and triggered DNM1L-mediated mitochondrial fragmentation. In contrast, autophagy activation by overexpression of ATG7 or chronic administration of rapamycin, the MTOR inhibitor, promoted DNM1L degradation and attenuated mitochondrial fragmentation in Prkaa2-deficient ( prkaa2 −/−) mice, suggesting that defective autophagy contributes to enhanced DNM1L expression and mitochondrial fragmentation. Additionally, the autophagic receptor protein SQSTM1/p62, which bound to DNM1L and led to its translocation into the autophagosome, was involved in DNM1L degradation by the autophagy-lysosome pathway. Gene silencing of SQSTM1 markedly reduced the association between SQSTM1 and DNM1L, impaired the degradation of DNM1L, and enhanced mitochondrial fragmentation in PRKAA-deficient endothelial cells. Finally, the genetic ( DNM1L siRNA) or pharmacological (mdivi-1) inhibition of DNMA1L ablated mitochondrial fragmentation in the mouse aortic endothelium and prevented the acetylcholine-induced relaxation of isolated mouse aortas. This suggests that aberrant DNM1L is responsible for enhanced mitochondrial fragmentation and endothelial dysfunction in prkaa knockout mice. Overall, our results show that PRKAA deletion promoted mitochondrial fragmentation in vascular endothelial cells by inhibiting the autophagy-dependent degradation of DNM1L.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Autophagy
          Autophagy
          KAUP
          kaup20
          Autophagy
          Taylor & Francis
          1554-8627
          1554-8635
          2017
          13 January 2017
          : 13
          : 2
          : 404-422
          Affiliations
          Center for Molecular and Translational Medicine, Georgia State University , Atlanta, GA USA
          Author notes
          CONTACT Ming-Hui Zou mzou@ 123456gsu.edu ; Zhonglin Xie zxie@ 123456gsu.edu Center of Molecular and Translational Medicine, Georgia State University , Atlanta, GA 30303, USA

          Color versions of one or more of the figures in the article can be found online at www.tandfonline.com/kaup.

          Supplemental data for this article can be accessed on the publisher's website.

          Article
          PMC5324848 PMC5324848 5324848 1263776
          10.1080/15548627.2016.1263776
          5324848
          28085543
          1cbd955d-7aeb-4da2-b8d5-901a01a8a2d7
          © 2017 Taylor & Francis
          History
          : 14 September 2015
          : 8 November 2016
          : 16 November 2016
          Page count
          Figures: 9, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 59, Pages: 19
          Categories
          Basic Research Paper

          PRKAA/AMPK catalytic subunit α,AMPK,autophagy,DNM1L,endothelial dysfunction,mitochondrial fission

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