Loss of UCP2 causes mitochondrial fragmentation by OMA1‐dependent proteolytic processing of OPA1 in podocytes

Author:

Yang Qianqian1ORCID,Wang Lulu2ORCID,Liang Yuehong2ORCID,He Qingyu2ORCID,Sun Qi2,Luo Jing2ORCID,Cao Hongdi2ORCID,Fang Yi2ORCID,Zhou Yang2ORCID,Yang Junwei2ORCID,Wen Ping2ORCID,Jiang Lei2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Nephrology, The Affiliated Huaian No.1 People's Hospital of Nanjing Medical University Huaian Jiangsu China

2. Center for Kidney Disease, Second Affiliated Hospital Nanjing Medical University Nanjing Jiangsu China

Abstract

AbstractMitochondrial dysfunction plays an important role in the onset and progression of podocyte injury and proteinuria. However, the process by which the change in the podocyte mitochondria occurs is not well understood. Uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) is a mitochondrial anion carrier protein, which is located in the mitochondrial inner membrane. Here, we reported that mice with podocyte‐specific Ucp2 deficiency developed podocytopathy with proteinuria with aging. Furthermore, those mice exhibited increased proteinuria in experimental models evoked by Adriamycin. Our findings suggest that UCP2 mediates mitochondrial dysfunction by regulating mitochondrial dynamic balance. Ucp2‐deleted podocytes exhibited increased mitochondrial fission and deficient in ATP production. Mechanistically, opacity protein 1 (OPA1), a key protein in fusion of mitochondrial inner membrane, was regulated by UCP2. Ucp2 deficiency promoted proteolysis of OPA1 by activation OMA1 which belongs to mitochondrial inner membrane zinc metalloprotease. Those finding demonstrate the role of UCP2 in mitochondrial dynamics in podocytes and provide new insights into pathogenesis associated with podocyte injury and proteinuria.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Biotechnology

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