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Publication : Mitochondrial translation deficiency impairs NAD<sup>+</sup> -mediated lysosomal acidification.

First Author  Yagi M Year  2021
Journal  EMBO J Volume  40
Issue  8 Pages  e105268
PubMed ID  33528041 Mgi Jnum  J:316851
Mgi Id  MGI:6709814 Doi  10.15252/embj.2020105268
Citation  Yagi M, et al. (2021) Mitochondrial translation deficiency impairs NAD(+) -mediated lysosomal acidification. EMBO J 40(8):e105268
abstractText  Mitochondrial translation dysfunction is associated with neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases. Cells eliminate defective mitochondria by the lysosomal machinery via autophagy. The relationship between mitochondrial translation and lysosomal function is unknown. In this study, mitochondrial translation-deficient hearts from p32-knockout mice were found to exhibit enlarged lysosomes containing lipofuscin, suggesting impaired lysosome and autolysosome function. These mice also displayed autophagic abnormalities, such as p62 accumulation and LC3 localization around broken mitochondria. The expression of genes encoding for nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+) ) biosynthetic enzymes-Nmnat3 and Nampt-and NAD(+) levels were decreased, suggesting that NAD(+) is essential for maintaining lysosomal acidification. Conversely, nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) administration or Nmnat3 overexpression rescued lysosomal acidification. Nmnat3 gene expression is suppressed by HIF1alpha, a transcription factor that is stabilized by mitochondrial translation dysfunction, suggesting that HIF1alpha-Nmnat3-mediated NAD(+) production is important for lysosomal function. The glycolytic enzymes GAPDH and PGK1 were found associated with lysosomal vesicles, and NAD(+) was required for ATP production around lysosomal vesicles. Thus, we conclude that NAD(+) content affected by mitochondrial dysfunction is essential for lysosomal maintenance.
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