Mitochondrial Dysfunction Plus High-Sugar Diet Provokes a Metabolic Crisis That Inhibits Growth
Author(s) -
Esko Kemppainen,
Jack George,
Görkem Garipler,
Tea Tuomela,
Essi Kiviranta,
Tomoyoshi Soga,
Cory D. Dunn,
Howard T. Jacobs
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0145836
Subject(s) - oxidative phosphorylation , mitochondrion , oxidative stress , biology , sugar , medicine , endocrinology , glycolysis , phosphorylation , protein kinase a , cytosol , mutant , cellular respiration , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , metabolism , enzyme , gene
The Drosophila mutant tko 25t exhibits a deficiency of mitochondrial protein synthesis, leading to a global insufficiency of respiration and oxidative phosphorylation. This entrains an organismal phenotype of developmental delay and sensitivity to seizures induced by mechanical stress. We found that the mutant phenotype is exacerbated in a dose-dependent fashion by high dietary sugar levels. tko 25t larvae were found to exhibit severe metabolic abnormalities that were further accentuated by high-sugar diet. These include elevated pyruvate and lactate, decreased ATP and NADPH. Dietary pyruvate or lactate supplementation phenocopied the effects of high sugar. Based on tissue-specific rescue, the crucial tissue in which this metabolic crisis initiates is the gut. It is accompanied by down-regulation of the apparatus of cytosolic protein synthesis and secretion at both the RNA and post-translational levels, including a novel regulation of S6 kinase at the protein level.
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