Periodic Reporting for period 1 - NEUROMITO (Mitochondrial Dynamics and Local Protein Synthesis in Dendrites)
Período documentado: 2016-01-01 hasta 2017-12-31
The overall goal of the project was to elucidate the significance of mitochondria during high-energy demands of local protein synthesis with the following objectives:
i) investigate mitochondrial compartmentalization and its activity-dependence in local dendritic translation; and
ii) analyse mitochondrial proteomics and transcriptomics during synaptic plasticity.
By refining and pushing the limits of conventional and super-resolution microscopy to image live dendritic mitochondria, experimentally manipulate local mitochondrial function in dendrites, label and visualize newly synthesized proteins in response to synaptic stimulation, I have demonstrated that: mitochondria exist in spatially stable compartments in dendrites and serve as local energy reserves to fuel synaptic protein synthesis during synaptic activity. These findings have revealed that in addition to the presence of localized translational machinery in dendrites, local compartments of energy exist, thereby opening up new unexplored questions on synaptic plasticity and metabolism.
In order to further investigate how the mitochondrial proteome is modulated during synaptic plasticity, I employed a previously reported strategy for labeling and isolation of the sub mitochondrial proteome, characterized and established it as a tool to examine the neuronal mitochondrial proteome and its regulation during neuronal activity.
I developed and characterized a novel methodology to selectively label and isolate the mitochondrial proteome from sub mitochondrial compartments –mitochondrial matrix and outer mitochondrial membrane– in neuronal cultures. I am currently exploiting this methodology to study the regulation of mitochondrial proteome during neuronal activity (Figure 2, Rangaraju V et al. manuscript in preparation). I am also investigating the mitochondrial proteome in sub neuronal compartments –soma and neurites– using a novel platform to grow neurons in physically separated chambers.
In summary, I have demonstrated that in addition to the presence of localized translational machinery in dendrites, local compartments of energy exist to fuel local translation in an activity-dependent manner. Further, I have implemented a novel methodology to study the sub mitochondrial proteome in neurons to investigate the modulation of the mitochondrial proteome during neuronal activity.
These findings have been presented at various international conferences – Gordon Research Conference Cell Biology of the Neuron 2016; Gordon Research Conference Dendrites: Molecular Structure & Function 2017; EMBO Fellows’ meeting 2017; and at science seminars open to the public (Bar of Science of MPIBR 2017, Ivy Circle and Cornell alumni club of Frankfurt).
This project has resulted in 3 manuscripts:
1. Vidhya Rangaraju*#, Susanne tom Dieck and Erin M Schuman, Local translation in neuronal compartments: how local is local? EMBO reports 18, 693 (2017).
Number of citations: 16. # Corresponding author.
2. Vidhya Rangaraju*, Marcel Lauterbach, Erin M Schuman, Spatially stable mitochondrial compartments fuel activity-dependent local translation, in review.
3. Vidhya Rangaraju*, Christina Thum, Fiona Rupprecht, Julian Langer, Erin M Schuman, Local mitochondrial proteome remodeling during synaptic activity, in preparation.
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So far, mitochondrial proteomics has only been possible with purified mitochondrial samples, which are often associated with other organellar contaminations. The novel methodology I have developed in neurons to label and detect the sub mitochondrial proteome, facilitates better detection of the sub mitochondrial proteome with fewer contaminations and a wider dynamic range compared to a mitochondrial proteome dataset obtained from whole neuronal cultures or purified whole mitochondria. Since the mitochondrial proteome labeling is done in live neurons in situ, this methodology also allows the identification of novel neuronal mitochondrial proteins that were otherwise unidentified by conventional mitochondrial purification and proteomic strategies.
I strongly believe that elucidating the role of mitochondria in local translation sheds light on the novel molecules involved in the energetics of the process and the molecular mechanisms of synaptic plasticity and memory formation. Particularly, the findings of this research project will not only aid in better understanding of mitochondrial biology in the context of neuronal function, but also in neurological disorders –Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s– that are associated with mitochondrial dysfunction aiding the development of novel therapeutic interventions in the future.