Mitochondria to nucleus stress signaling

Author:

Biswas Gopa1,Anandatheerthavarada Hindupur K.1,Zaidi Mone2,Avadhani Narayan G.1

Affiliation:

1. The Department of Animal Biology and Mari Lowe Center for Comparative Oncology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104

2. Mount Sinai Bone Program, Department of Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, and Bronx VA Geriatric Research Education and Medical Center, New York, NY 10029

Abstract

Mitochondrial genetic and metabolic stress causes activation of calcineurin (Cn), NFAT, ATF2, and NFκB/Rel factors, which collectively alter the expression of an array of nuclear genes. We demonstrate here that mitochondrial stress–induced activation of NFκB/Rel factors involves inactivation of IκBβ through Cn-mediated dephosphorylation. Phosphorylated IκBβ is a substrate for Cn phosphatase, which was inhibited by FK506 and RII peptide. Chemical cross-linking and coimmunoprecipitation show that NFκB/Rel factor–bound IκBβ forms a ternary complex with Cn under in vitro and in vivo conditions that was sensitive to FK506. Results show that phosphorylation at S313 and S315 from the COOH-terminal PEST domain of IκBβ is critical for binding to Cn. Mutations at S313/S315 of IκBβ abolished Cn binding, inhibited Cn-mediated increase of Rel proteins in the nucleus, and had a dominant-negative effect on the mitochondrial stress–induced expression of RyR1 and cathepsin L genes. Our results show the distinctive nature of mitochondrial stress–induced NFκB/Rel activation, which is independent of IKKα and IKKβ kinases and affects gene target(s) that are different from cytokine and TNFα-induced stress signaling. The results provide new insights into the role of Cn as a critical link between Ca2+ signaling and NFκB/Rel activation.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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