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Disuse-associated loss of the protease LONP1 in muscle impairs mitochondrial function and causes reduced skeletal muscle mass and strength

Authors :
Zhisheng Xu
Tingting Fu
Qiqi Guo
Danxia Zhou
Wanping Sun
Zheng Zhou
Xinyi Chen
Jingzi Zhang
Lin Liu
Liwei Xiao
Yujing Yin
Yuhuan Jia
Erkai Pang
Yuncong Chen
Xin Pan
Lei Fang
Min-sheng Zhu
Wenyong Fei
Bin Lu
Zhenji Gan
Source :
Nature Communications. 13
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Mitochondrial proteolysis is an evolutionarily conserved quality-control mechanism to maintain proper mitochondrial integrity and function. However, the physiological relevance of stress-induced impaired mitochondrial protein quality remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate that LONP1, a major mitochondrial protease resides in the matrix, plays a role in controlling mitochondrial function as well as skeletal muscle mass and strength in response to muscle disuse. In humans and mice, disuse-related muscle loss is associated with decreased mitochondrial LONP1 protein. Skeletal muscle-specific ablation of LONP1 in mice resulted in impaired mitochondrial protein turnover, leading to mitochondrial dysfunction. This caused reduced muscle fiber size and strength. Mechanistically, aberrant accumulation of mitochondrial-retained protein in muscle upon loss of LONP1 induces the activation of autophagy-lysosome degradation program of muscle loss. Overexpressing a mitochondrial-retained mutant ornithine transcarbamylase (ΔOTC), a known protein degraded by LONP1, in skeletal muscle induces mitochondrial dysfunction, autophagy activation, and cause muscle loss and weakness. Thus, these findings reveal a role of LONP1-dependent mitochondrial protein quality-control in safeguarding mitochondrial function and preserving skeletal muscle mass and strength, and unravel a link between mitochondrial protein quality and muscle mass maintenance during muscle disuse.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a11aef13d94e8b521c4a8aeb7db293ed