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The m-AAA Protease Associated with Neurodegeneration Limits MCU Activity in Mitochondria
ISSN
1097-4164
1097-2765
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
Koenig, Tim
Troeder, Simon E.
Bakka, Kavya
Korwitz, Anne
Lampe, Philipp A.
Patron, Maria
Muhlmeister, Mareike
Guerrero-Castillo, Sergio
Brandt, Ulrich
Decker, Thorsten
Lauria, Ines
Paggio, Angela
Rizzuto, Rosario
Rugarli, Elena I.
De Stefani, Diego
Langer, Thomas
DOI
10.1016/j.molcel.2016.08.020
Abstract
Mutations in subunits of mitochondrialm-AAA proteases in the inner membrane cause neurodegeneration in spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA28) and hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP7). m-AAA proteases preserve mitochondrial proteostasis, mitochondrial morphology, and efficient OXPHOS activity, but the cause for neuronal loss in disease is unknown. We have determined the neuronal interactome of m-AAA proteases in mice and identified a complex with C2ORF47 (termed MAIP1), which counteracts cell death by regulating the assembly of the mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter MCU. While MAIP1 assists biogenesis of the MCU subunit EMRE, the m-AAA protease degrades non-assembled EMRE and ensures efficient assembly of gatekeeper subunits with MCU. Loss of the m-AAA protease results in accumulation of constitutively active MCU-EMRE channels lacking gatekeeper subunits in neuronal mitochondria and facilitates mitochondrial Ca2+ overload, mitochondrial permeability transition pore opening, and neuronal death. Together, our results explain neuronal loss in m-AAA protease deficiency by deregulated mitochondrial Ca2+ homeostasis.