Mitochondrial-specific autophagy linked to mitochondrial dysfunction following traumatic freeze injury in mice

Author:

Nichenko Anna S.12,Southern W. Michael12,Tehrani Kayvan Forouhesh2,Qualls Anita E.2,Flemington Alexandra B.2,Mercer Grant H.2,Yin Amelia34,Mortensen Luke J.2,Yin Hang34,Call Jarrod A.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Kinesiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia

2. Regenerative Bioscience Center, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia

3. Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia

4. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia

Abstract

The objective of this study was to interrogate the link between mitochondrial dysfunction and mitochondrial-specific autophagy in skeletal muscle. C57BL/6J mice were used to establish a time course of mitochondrial function and autophagy induction after fatigue ( n = 12), eccentric contraction-induced injury ( n = 20), or traumatic freeze injury (FI, n = 28); only FI resulted in a combination of mitochondrial dysfunction, i.e., decreased mitochondrial respiration, and autophagy induction. Moving forward, we tested the hypothesis that mitochondrial-specific autophagy is important for the timely recovery of mitochondrial function after FI. Following FI, there is a significant increase in several mitochondrial-specific autophagy-related protein contents including dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), BCL1 interacting protein (BNIP3), Pink1, and Parkin (~2-fold, P < 0.02). Also, mitochondrial-enriched fractions from FI muscles showed microtubule-associated protein light chain B1 (LC3)II colocalization suggesting autophagosome assembly around the damaged mitochondrial. Unc-51 like autophagy activating kinase (Ulk1) is considered necessary for mitochondrial-specific autophagy and herein we utilized a mouse model with Ulk1 deficiency in adult skeletal muscle ( myogenin-Cre). While Ulk1 knockouts had contractile weakness compared with littermate controls (−27%, P < 0.02), the recovery of mitochondrial function was not different, and this may be due in part to a partial rescue of Ulk1 protein content within the regenerating muscle tissue of knockouts from differentiated satellite cells in which Ulk1 was not genetically altered via myogenin-Cre. Lastly, autophagy flux was significantly less in injured versus uninjured muscles (−26%, P < 0.02) despite the increase in autophagy-related protein content. This suggests autophagy flux is not upregulated to match increases in autophagy machinery after injury and represents a potential bottleneck in the clearance of damaged mitochondria by autophagy.

Funder

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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