PLoS Biology (Apr 2024)

The C-terminus of the prototypical M2 muscarinic receptor localizes to the mitochondria and regulates cell respiration under stress conditions.

  • Irene Fasciani,
  • Francesco Petragnano,
  • Ziming Wang,
  • Ruairidh Edwards,
  • Narasimha Telugu,
  • Ilaria Pietrantoni,
  • Ulrike Zabel,
  • Henrik Zauber,
  • Marlies Grieben,
  • Maria E Terzenidou,
  • Jacopo Di Gregorio,
  • Cristina Pellegrini,
  • Silvano Santini,
  • Anna R Taddei,
  • Bärbel Pohl,
  • Stefano Aringhieri,
  • Marco Carli,
  • Gabriella Aloisi,
  • Francesco Marampon,
  • Eve Charlesworth,
  • Alexandra Roman,
  • Sebastian Diecke,
  • Vincenzo Flati,
  • Franco Giorgi,
  • Fernanda Amicarelli,
  • Andrew B Tobin,
  • Marco Scarselli,
  • Kostas Tokatlidis,
  • Mario Rossi,
  • Martin J Lohse,
  • Paolo Annibale,
  • Roberto Maggio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002582
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 4
p. e3002582

Abstract

Read online

Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors are prototypical G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), members of a large family of 7 transmembrane receptors mediating a wide variety of extracellular signals. We show here, in cultured cells and in a murine model, that the carboxyl terminal fragment of the muscarinic M2 receptor, comprising the transmembrane regions 6 and 7 (M2tail), is expressed by virtue of an internal ribosome entry site localized in the third intracellular loop. Single-cell imaging and import in isolated yeast mitochondria reveals that M2tail, whose expression is up-regulated in cells undergoing integrated stress response, does not follow the normal route to the plasma membrane, but is almost exclusively sorted to the mitochondria inner membrane: here, it controls oxygen consumption, cell proliferation, and the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by reducing oxidative phosphorylation. Crispr/Cas9 editing of the key methionine where cap-independent translation begins in human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), reveals the physiological role of this process in influencing cell proliferation and oxygen consumption at the endogenous level. The expression of the C-terminal domain of a GPCR, capable of regulating mitochondrial function, constitutes a hitherto unknown mechanism notably unrelated to its canonical signaling function as a GPCR at the plasma membrane. This work thus highlights a potential novel mechanism that cells may use for controlling their metabolism under variable environmental conditions, notably as a negative regulator of cell respiration.