Control of mitochondrial morphology by a human mitofusin

A Santel, MT Fuller - Journal of cell science, 2001 - journals.biologists.com
A Santel, MT Fuller
Journal of cell science, 2001journals.biologists.com
Although changes in mitochondrial size and arrangement accompany both cellular
differentiation and human disease, the mechanisms that mediate mitochondrial fusion,
fission and morphogenesis in mammalian cells are not understood. We have identified two
human genes encoding potential mediators of mitochondrial fusion. The mitofusins (Mfn1
and Mfn2) are homologs of the Drosophila protein fuzzy onion (Fzo) that associate with
mitochondria and alter mitochondrial morphology when expressed by transient transfection …
Abstract
Although changes in mitochondrial size and arrangement accompany both cellular differentiation and human disease, the mechanisms that mediate mitochondrial fusion, fission and morphogenesis in mammalian cells are not understood. We have identified two human genes encoding potential mediators of mitochondrial fusion. The mitofusins (Mfn1 and Mfn2) are homologs of the Drosophila protein fuzzy onion (Fzo) that associate with mitochondria and alter mitochondrial morphology when expressed by transient transfection in tissue culture cells. An internal region including a predicted bipartite transmembrane domain (TM) is sufficient to target Mfn2 to mitochondria and requires hydrophobic residues within the TM. Co-expression of Mfn2 with a dominant interfering mutant dynamin-related protein (Drp1K38A) proposed to block mitochondrial fission resulted in long mitochondrial filaments and networks. Formation of mitochondrial filaments and networks required a wild-type Mfn2 GTPase domain, suggesting that the Mfn2 GTPase regulates or mediates mitochondrial fusion and that mitofusins and dynamin related GTPases play opposing roles in mitochondrial fusion and fission in mammals, as in yeast.
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