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Publication : A transmitochondrial sodium gradient controls membrane potential in mammalian mitochondria.

First Author  Hernansanz-Agustín P Year  2024
Journal  Cell Volume  187
Issue  23 Pages  6599-6613.e21
PubMed ID  39303716 Mgi Jnum  J:358176
Mgi Id  MGI:7779292 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2024.08.045
Citation  Hernansanz-Agustin P, et al. (2024) A transmitochondrial sodium gradient controls membrane potential in mammalian mitochondria. Cell
abstractText  Eukaryotic cell function and survival rely on the use of a mitochondrial H(+) electrochemical gradient (Deltap), which is composed of an inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) potential (DeltaPsimt) and a pH gradient (DeltapH). So far, DeltaPsimt has been assumed to be composed exclusively of H(+). Here, using a rainbow of mitochondrial and nuclear genetic models, we have discovered that a Na(+) gradient equates with the H(+) gradient and controls half of DeltaPsimt in coupled-respiring mammalian mitochondria. This parallelism is controlled by the activity of the long-sought Na(+)-specific Na(+)/H(+) exchanger (mNHE), which we have identified as the P-module of complex I (CI). Deregulation of this mNHE function, without affecting the canonical enzymatic activity or the assembly of CI, occurs in Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), which has profound consequences in DeltaPsimt and mitochondrial Ca(2+) homeostasis and explains the previously unknown molecular pathogenesis of this neurodegenerative disease.
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