Mt-Keima detects PINK1-PRKN mitophagy with greater sensitivity than mito-QC.

Autophagy

Inherited Movement Disorders Unit, Neurogenetics Branch, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.

Published: November 2021

PINK1 and PRKN, which cause Parkinson disease when mutated, form a quality control mitophagy pathway that is well-characterized in cultured cells. The extent to which the PINK1-PRKN pathway contributes to mitophagy , however, is controversial. This is due in large part to conflicting results from studies using one of two mitophagy reporters: mt-Keima or mito-QC. Studies using mt-Keima have generally detected PINK1-PRKN mitophagy , whereas those using mito-QC generally have not. Here, we directly compared the performance of mito-QC and mt-Keima in cell culture and in mice subjected to a PINK1-PRKN activating stress. We found that mito-QC was less sensitive than mt-Keima for mitophagy, and that this difference was more pronounced for PINK1-PRKN mitophagy. These findings suggest that mito-QC's poor sensitivity may account for conflicting reports of PINK1-PRKN mitophagy and caution against using mito-QC as a reporter for PINK1-PRKN mitophagy. DFP: deferiprone; EE: exhaustive exercise; FBS: fetal bovine serum; OAQ: oligomycin, antimycin, and Q-VD-OPH; OMM: outer mitochondrial membrane; PBS: phosphate-buffered saline; PD: Parkinson disease; UPS: ubiquitin-proteasome system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8632312PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15548627.2021.1896924DOI Listing

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