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The Mitochondrial Unfolded Protein Response Is Mediated Cell-Non-autonomously by Retromer-Dependent Wnt Signaling
Author(s) -
Qian Zhang,
Xueying Wu,
Peng Chen,
Limeng Liu,
Nan Xin,
Ye Tian,
Andrew Dillin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2018.06.029
Subject(s) - biology , wnt signaling pathway , microbiology and biotechnology , retromer , frizzled , mitochondrial fusion , unfolded protein response , mitochondrion , dnaja3 , signal transduction , endosome , genetics , mitochondrial dna , intracellular , endoplasmic reticulum , gene
The mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPR mt ) can be triggered in a cell-non-autonomous fashion across multiple tissues in response to mitochondrial dysfunction. The ability to communicate information about the presence of mitochondrial stress enables a global response that can ultimately better protect an organism from local mitochondrial challenges. We find that animals use retromer-dependent Wnt signaling to propagate mitochondrial stress signals from the nervous system to peripheral tissues. Specifically, the polyQ40-triggered activation of mitochondrial stress or reduction of cco-1 (complex IV subunit) in neurons of C. elegans results in the Wnt-dependent induction of cell-non-autonomous UPR mt in peripheral cells. Loss-of-function mutations of retromer complex components that are responsible for recycling the Wnt secretion-factor/MIG-14 prevent Wnt secretion and thereby suppress cell-non-autonomous UPR mt . Neuronal expression of the Wnt ligand/EGL-20 is sufficient to induce cell-non-autonomous UPR mt in a retromer complex-, Wnt signaling-, and serotonin-dependent manner, clearly implicating Wnt signaling as a strong candidate for the "mitokine" signal.

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