OxPhos defects cause hypermetabolism and reduce lifespan in cells and in patients with mitochondrial diseases

Author:

Sturm GabrielORCID,Karan Kalpita R.,Monzel Anna S.,Santhanam Balaji,Taivassalo Tanja,Bris Céline,Ware Sarah A.,Cross Marissa,Towheed Atif,Higgins-Chen AlbertORCID,McManus Meagan J.,Cardenas AndresORCID,Lin Jue,Epel Elissa S.,Rahman ShamimaORCID,Vissing John,Grassi Bruno,Levine MorganORCID,Horvath SteveORCID,Haller Ronald G.,Lenaers Guy,Wallace Douglas C.ORCID,St-Onge Marie-Pierre,Tavazoie Saeed,Procaccio Vincent,Kaufman Brett A.,Seifert Erin L.,Hirano Michio,Picard MartinORCID

Abstract

AbstractPatients with primary mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos) defects present with fatigue and multi-system disorders, are often lean, and die prematurely, but the mechanistic basis for this clinical picture remains unclear. By integrating data from 17 cohorts of patients with mitochondrial diseases (n = 690) we find evidence that these disorders increase resting energy expenditure, a state termed hypermetabolism. We examine this phenomenon longitudinally in patient-derived fibroblasts from multiple donors. Genetically or pharmacologically disrupting OxPhos approximately doubles cellular energy expenditure. This cell-autonomous state of hypermetabolism occurs despite near-normal OxPhos coupling efficiency, excluding uncoupling as a general mechanism. Instead, hypermetabolism is associated with mitochondrial DNA instability, activation of the integrated stress response (ISR), and increased extracellular secretion of age-related cytokines and metabokines including GDF15. In parallel, OxPhos defects accelerate telomere erosion and epigenetic aging per cell division, consistent with evidence that excess energy expenditure accelerates biological aging. To explore potential mechanisms for these effects, we generate a longitudinal RNASeq and DNA methylation resource dataset, which reveals conserved, energetically demanding, genome-wide recalibrations. Taken together, these findings highlight the need to understand how OxPhos defects influence the energetic cost of living, and the link between hypermetabolism and aging in cells and patients with mitochondrial diseases.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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