by Brooke M. Baker, Amrita M. Nargund, Tiffany Sun, Cole M. Haynes
Cells respond to defects in mitochondrial function by activating signaling pathways that restore homeostasis. The mitochondrial peptide exporter HAF-1 and the bZip transcription factor ATFS-1 represent one stress response pathway that regulates the transcription of mitochondrial chaperone genes during mitochondrial dysfunction. Here, we report that GCN-2, an eIF2α kinase that modulates cytosolic protein synthesis, functions in a complementary pathway to that of HAF-1 and ATFS-1. During mitochondrial dysfunction, GCN-2–dependent eIF2α phosphorylation is required for development as well as the lifespan extension observed in Caenorhabditis elegans. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated from dysfunctional mitochondria are required for GCN-2–dependent eIF2α phosphorylation but not ATFS-1 activation. Simultaneous deletion of ATFS-1 and GCN-2 compounds the developmental defects associated with mitochondrial stress, while stressed animals lacking GCN-2 display a greater dependence on ATFS-1 and stronger induction of mitochondrial chaperone genes. These findings are consistent with translational control and stress-dependent chaperone induction acting in complementary arms of the UPR
mt.
| Autoren: |
|
Brooke M. Baker et al. |
| Journal: |
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PLoS Genetics
|
| Band: |
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8 |
| Ausgabe: |
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6 |
| Jahrgang: |
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2012 |
| Seiten: |
|
e1002760 |
| DOI: |
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10.1371/journal.pgen.1002760 |
| Erscheinungsdatum: |
|
14.06.2012 |