Understanding mechanistic basis of regulation of cell growth by mitochondrial activity in Drosophila melanogaster
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IISERM
Abstract
Cell growth, the process of attaining characteristic size and volume of a cell during
development, is regulated by diverse cell intrinsic and cell extrinsic factors. The size of a cell is
determined by the relative rates of synthesis, storage and turnover of macromolecules and
metabolites. Studies in diverse cell lines and model organisms, ranging from yeast to rodents,
have established that conserved Insulin/TOR cascade regulates cell growth by integrating
nutrient availability and metabolism of the cell. Despite this, how functional status of
mitochondria, the ware-house of metabolism, regulates cell growth is not well addressed.
In this study, using genetically amenable model organism, Drosophila, a loss of function
RNAi screen was performed to isolate nuclear genes encoding mitochondrial proteins that affect
the overgrowth of adult eye, associated with over expression of Cyclin D and CDK4. As
outcome of the screen, mitochondrial acyl carrier protein 1 (mtACP1), was identified as positive
regulator of cell growth. mtACP1 is a well conserved protein that regulates mitochondrial fatty
acid biosynthesis (FASII) and activity of Complex I of Electron Transport Chain. We show that
loss of mtAcp1 increases ROS which reduces cell size by upregulation of 4EBP and
downregulation of S6K and causes G1-S cell cycle arrest by upregulation of Dacapo, the p21
homolog in flies. Interestingly, the elevated levels of ROS activate JNK pathway which
modulates cell growth without impinging into the conserved TOR cascade.
The same signaling cascade, Ask1-JNK-FOXO senses the qualitative and quantitative
differences in ROS to evoke differential cellular responses. Another exciting outcome of this
work is, in response to ecdysone signaling, ROS causes the growth arrest in fat body cells, during
development. We show that in this process, ROS activated JNK pathway is instrumental in
attaining the balance of insulin/ecdysone signaling.
Thus, this study defines an elegant mechanism where the threshold of ROS molecules
generated, restricts cell growth during development and couples systemic growth to the
development of the organism. Since the signaling cascades in growth regulation are conserved
from Drosophila to humans and given the importance of mitochondrial function in healthy and
pathophysiological conditions, our study holds far-reaching implications.