Cell Reports (Mar 2017)

Tissue-Specific Mitochondrial Decoding of Cytoplasmic Ca2+ Signals Is Controlled by the Stoichiometry of MICU1/2 and MCU

  • Melanie Paillard,
  • György Csordás,
  • Gergö Szanda,
  • Tünde Golenár,
  • Valentina Debattisti,
  • Adam Bartok,
  • Nadan Wang,
  • Cynthia Moffat,
  • Erin L. Seifert,
  • András Spät,
  • György Hajnóczky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.02.032
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 10
pp. 2291 – 2300

Abstract

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Mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake through the Ca2+ uniporter supports cell functions, including oxidative metabolism, while meeting tissue-specific calcium signaling patterns and energy needs. The molecular mechanisms underlying tissue-specific control of the uniporter are unknown. Here, we investigated a possible role for tissue-specific stoichiometry between the Ca2+-sensing regulators (MICUs) and pore unit (MCU) of the uniporter. Low MICU1:MCU protein ratio lowered the [Ca2+] threshold for Ca2+ uptake and activation of oxidative metabolism but decreased the cooperativity of uniporter activation in heart and skeletal muscle compared to liver. In MICU1-overexpressing cells, MICU1 was pulled down by MCU proportionally to MICU1 overexpression, suggesting that MICU1:MCU protein ratio directly reflected their association. Overexpressing MICU1 in the heart increased MICU1:MCU ratio, leading to liver-like mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake phenotype and cardiac contractile dysfunction. Thus, the proportion of MICU1-free and MICU1-associated MCU controls these tissue-specific uniporter phenotypes and downstream Ca2+ tuning of oxidative metabolism.

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