A new mechanism controlling mitochondrial DNA synthesis identified!

A new mechanism controlling mitochondrial DNA synthesis identified!
 

Aging, neurodegenerative disorders and metabolic disease are all linked to mitochondria, structures within our cells that generate chemical energy and maintain their own DNA. In a fundamental discovery with far-reaching implications, scientists at the University of California, Davis, now show how cells control DNA synthesis in mitochondria and couple it to mitochondrial division. 

The work is published in the journal Science. "This has very profound implications for human disease," said the senior author on the paper.

Mitochondria retain their own DNA from the very distant past, when they were a type of bacteria that moved into other cells and never left. All eukaryotic cells -- in plants, animals and fungi -- contain mitochondria, which allow oxygen-breathing organisms to obtain energy from respiration.

In human cells, mitochondria are elongated, snaking tubes, with hundreds to thousands of copies of their single chromosome dotted around, packaged in a structure called the nucleoid. While the DNA in the cell's nucleus comes from both parents, your mitochondrial DNA is inherited only from your mother.

While division of DNA in the cell's nucleus is tightly controlled, synthesis and division of mitochondrial DNA is "a lot more relaxed," the senior author said.

How does the cell decide where all the copies of the mitochondrial DNA should go? And how is their division organized, if it is?

Researchers used microscopy with fluorescent dyes to tag mitochondria, their chromosomes, and the endoplasmic reticulum, a network of tubes that spreads throughout the cell.

They found that dividing mitochondrial chromosomes were located at points where the endoplasmic reticulum touches the outside of a mitochondrion. These also became the points where mitochondria divided into two offspring, a process that requires a sort of lasso of protein around the organelle that squeezes it until it splits.
"The endoplasmic reticulum comes into contact with the mitochondrion, and where they contact is where they divide," author said.

The contact between the two organelles "licenses" the mitochondrial DNA to copy and divide, author said. This DNA division is in turn spatially coupled to division of the mitochondrion itself, and to distribution of the daughter DNA around the cell.

"There are hundreds of contact points around the cell that determine where division takes place and how mitochondria are distributed, but division preferentially occurs at the subset of contacts where mitochondrial DNA is being copied" author said. "It shows that there is a higher order to this, it is not simply random."

The discovery has broad implications for understanding cell functions, aging and a broad range of diseases. that it stemmed entirely from fundamental research.

"We didn't come to this by studying any specific disease, it's discovery-based research," author said. "But this will greatly impact human health."

https://www.ucdavis.edu/news/key-regulating-cell%E2%80%99s-powerhouse-discovered

Edited

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