Abstract

BackgroundNeurons are highly polarized cells consisting of three distinct functional domains: the cell body (and associated dendrites), the axon and the synapse. Previously, it was believed that the clinical phenotypes of neurodegenerative diseases were caused by the loss of entire neurons, however it has recently become apparent that these neuronal sub-compartments can degenerate independently, with synapses being particularly vulnerable to a broad range of stimuli. Whilst the properties governing the differential degenerative mechanisms remain unknown, mitochondria consistently appear in the literature, suggesting these somewhat promiscuous organelles may play a role in affecting synaptic stability. Synaptic and non-synaptic mitochondrial subpools are known to have different enzymatic properties (first demonstrated by Lai et al., 1977). However, the molecular basis underpinning these alterations, and their effects on morphology, has not been well documented.MethodsThe current study has employed electron microscopy, label-free proteomics and in silico analyses to characterize the morphological and biochemical properties of discrete sub-populations of mitochondria. The physiological relevance of these findings was confirmed in-vivo using a molecular genetic approach at the Drosophila neuromuscular junction.ResultsHere, we demonstrate that mitochondria at the synaptic terminal are indeed morphologically different to non-synaptic mitochondria, in both rodents and human patients. Furthermore, generation of proteomic profiles reveals distinct molecular fingerprints – highlighting that the properties of complex I may represent an important specialisation of synaptic mitochondria. Evidence also suggests that at least 30% of the mitochondrial enzymatic activity differences previously reported can be accounted for by protein abundance. Finally, we demonstrate that the molecular differences between discrete mitochondrial sub-populations are capable of selectively influencing synaptic morphology in-vivo. We offer several novel mitochondrial candidates that have the propensity to significantly alter the synaptic architecture in-vivo.ConclusionsOur study demonstrates discrete proteomic profiles exist dependent upon mitochondrial subcellular localization and selective alteration of intrinsic mitochondrial proteins alters synaptic morphology in-vivo.

Highlights

  • Neurons are highly polarized cells consisting of three distinct functional domains: the cell body, the axon and the synapse

  • It was believed that the clinical phenotypes of neurodegenerative diseases were caused by the loss of entire neurons [3], it has recently become apparent that these neuronal sub-compartments can degenerate independently of one another [4, 5], with synapses being vulnerable to a broad range of stimuli

  • Mitochondrial subcellular localisation dictates organelle morphology in rodents and humans Enzymatic activity differences between neuronal mitochondrial sub-populations were first comprehensively described in the 1970s [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Neurons are highly polarized cells consisting of three distinct functional domains: the cell body (and associated dendrites), the axon and the synapse. Whilst the properties of the potential differential degenerative mechanisms remain largely unknown, numerous themes have consistently appeared in the literature, suggesting that proteins regulating the ubiquitin-proteasome system [6,7,8], oxidative stress [9,10,11,12] and mitochondria [1, 6, 10, 12,13,14,15] may all play a role in regulating the stability of the synaptic compartment. Sub-populations of mitochondria are enriched pre- and post-synaptically [1, 6, 10] Such synaptic mitochondria are reportedly distinguishable from non-synaptic mitochondria, displaying unique enzymatic [17], calcium buffering [18, 19] and antioxidant properties [10]. If and how these distinctive subpopulations of synaptic mitochondria influence the vulnerability of synaptic compartments remains largely unknown

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