Abstract

Specific patterns of mitochondrial dynamics have been repeatedly reported to promote drug resistance in cancer. However, whether targeting mitochondrial fission- and fusion-related proteins could be leveraged to combat multidrug-resistant pediatric sarcomas is poorly understood. Here, we demonstrated that the expression and activation of the mitochondrial fission mediator DRP1 are affected by chemotherapy exposure in common pediatric sarcomas, namely, rhabdomyosarcoma and osteosarcoma. Unexpectedly, decreasing DRP1 activity through stable DRP1 knockdown neither attenuated sarcoma drug resistance nor affected growth rate or mitochondrial network morphology. The minimal impact on sarcoma cell physiology, along with the up-regulation of fission adaptor proteins (MFF and FIS1) detected in rhabdomyosarcoma cells, suggests an alternative DRP1-independent mitochondrial fission mechanism that may efficiently compensate for the lack of DRP1 activity. By exploring the upstream mitophagy and mitochondrial fission regulator, AMPKα1, we found that markedly reduced AMPKα1 levels are sufficient to maintain AMPK signaling capacity without affecting chemosensitivity. Collectively, our findings challenge the direct involvement of DRP1 in pediatric sarcoma drug resistance and highlight the complexity of yet-to-be-characterized noncanonical regulators of mitochondrial dynamics.

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