Nature Communications (Jun 2024)

A tripartite organelle platform links growth factor receptor signaling to mitochondrial metabolism

  • Deborah Mesa,
  • Elisa Barbieri,
  • Andrea Raimondi,
  • Stefano Freddi,
  • Giorgia Miloro,
  • Gorana Jendrisek,
  • Giusi Caldieri,
  • Micaela Quarto,
  • Irene Schiano Lomoriello,
  • Maria Grazia Malabarba,
  • Arianna Bresci,
  • Francesco Manetti,
  • Federico Vernuccio,
  • Hind Abdo,
  • Giorgio Scita,
  • Letizia Lanzetti,
  • Dario Polli,
  • Carlo Tacchetti,
  • Paolo Pinton,
  • Massimo Bonora,
  • Pier Paolo Di Fiore,
  • Sara Sigismund

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49543-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

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Abstract One open question in the biology of growth factor receptors is how a quantitative input (i.e., ligand concentration) is decoded by the cell to produce specific response(s). Here, we show that an EGFR endocytic mechanism, non-clathrin endocytosis (NCE), which is activated only at high ligand concentrations and targets receptor to degradation, requires a tripartite organelle platform involving the plasma membrane (PM), endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria. At these contact sites, EGFR-dependent, ER-generated Ca2+ oscillations are sensed by mitochondria, leading to increased metabolism and ATP production. Locally released ATP is required for cortical actin remodeling and EGFR-NCE vesicle fission. The same biochemical circuitry is also needed for an effector function of EGFR, i.e., collective motility. The multiorganelle signaling platform herein described mediates direct communication between EGFR signaling and mitochondrial metabolism, and is predicted to have a broad impact on cell physiology as it is activated by another growth factor receptor, HGFR/MET.