Visualizing and Modulating Mitophagy for Therapeutic Studies of Neurodegeneration
Author(s) -
Hiroyuki Katayama,
Hiroshi Hama,
Koji Nagasawa,
Hiroshi Kurokawa,
Mayu Sugiyama,
Ryoko Ando,
Masaaki Funata,
Nobuyo Yoshida,
Misaki Homma,
Takanori Nishimura,
Megumu Takahashi,
Yoko Ishida,
Hiroyuki Hioki,
Yoshiyuki Tsujihata,
Atsushi Miyawaki
Publication year - 2020
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.2020.04.025
Subject(s) - mitophagy , biology , mitochondrion , neurodegeneration , microbiology and biotechnology , dopaminergic , computational biology , neuroscience , biochemistry , autophagy , disease , dopamine , pathology , medicine , apoptosis
Dysfunctional mitochondria accumulate in many human diseases. Accordingly, mitophagy, which removes these mitochondria through lysosomal degradation, is attracting broad attention. Due to uncertainties in the operational principles of conventional mitophagy probes, however, the specificity and quantitativeness of their readouts are disputable. Thorough investigation of the behaviors and fates of fluorescent proteins inside and outside lysosomes enabled us to develop an indicator for mitophagy, mito-SRAI. Through strict control of its mitochondrial targeting, we were able to monitor mitophagy in fixed biological samples more reproducibly than before. Large-scale image-based high-throughput screening led to the discovery of a hit compound that induces selective mitophagy of damaged mitochondria. In a mouse model of Parkinsons disease, we found that dopaminergic neurons selectively failed to execute mitophagy that promoted their survival within lesions. These results show that mito-SRAI is an essential tool for quantitative studies of mitochondrial quality control.
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