Author
Listed:
- Simon T. Bond
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
University of Melbourne
Monash University)
- Emily J. King
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
Monash University)
- Shannen M. Walker
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
Monash University)
- Christine Yang
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Yingying Liu
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Kevin H. Liu
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Aowen Zhuang
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Aaron W. Jurrjens
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
Monash University)
- Haoyun A. Fang
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Luke E. Formosa
(Monash University)
- Artika P. Nath
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Sergio Ruiz Carmona
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Michael Inouye
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Thy Duong
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute)
- Kevin Huynh
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
University of Melbourne)
- Peter J. Meikle
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
University of Melbourne
Monash University
La Trobe University)
- Simon Crawford
(Monash University)
- Georg Ramm
(Monash University
Monash University)
- Sheik Nadeem Elahee Doomun
(Bio21)
- David P. Souza
(Bio21)
- Danielle L. Rudler
(Western Australia
Western Australia)
- Anna C. Calkin
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
University of Melbourne)
- Aleksandra Filipovska
(Western Australia
Western Australia)
- David W. Greening
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
University of Melbourne
Monash University
La Trobe University)
- Darren C. Henstridge
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
University of Tasmania)
- Brian G. Drew
(Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute
University of Melbourne
Monash University
La Trobe University)
Abstract
During mitochondrial damage, information is relayed between the mitochondria and nucleus to coordinate precise responses to preserve cellular health. One such pathway is the mitochondrial integrated stress response (mtISR), which is known to be activated by mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage. However, the causal molecular signals responsible for activation of the mtISR remain mostly unknown. A gene often associated with mtDNA mutations/deletions is Polg1, which encodes the mitochondrial DNA Polymerase γ (PolG). Here, we describe an inducible, tissue specific model of PolG mutation, which in muscle specific animals leads to rapid development of mitochondrial dysfunction and muscular degeneration in male animals from ~5 months of age. Detailed molecular profiling demonstrated robust activation of the mtISR in muscles from these animals. This was accompanied by striking alterations to enzymes in the mitochondrial folate cycle that was likely driven by a specific depletion in the folate cycle metabolite 5,10 methenyl-THF, strongly implying imbalanced folate intermediates as a previously unrecognised pathology linking the mtISR and mitochondrial disease.
Suggested Citation
Simon T. Bond & Emily J. King & Shannen M. Walker & Christine Yang & Yingying Liu & Kevin H. Liu & Aowen Zhuang & Aaron W. Jurrjens & Haoyun A. Fang & Luke E. Formosa & Artika P. Nath & Sergio Ruiz Ca, 2025.
"Mitochondrial damage in muscle specific PolG mutant mice activates the integrated stress response and disrupts the mitochondrial folate cycle,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-21, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-57299-3
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57299-3
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