Mitochondria are double-membrane organelles with varying shapes influenced by metabolic conditions, developmental stage, and environmental stimuli1–4. Their dynamic morphology is realized through regulated and balanced fusion and fission processes5, 6. Fusion is crucial for the health and physiological functions of mitochondria, including complementation of damaged mitochondrial DNAs and maintenance of membrane potential6–8. Mitofusins (Mfns) are dynamin-related GTPases essential for mitochondrial fusion9, 10. They are embedded in the mitochondrial outer membrane and thought to fuse adjacent mitochondria via concerted oligomerization and GTP hydrolysis11–13. However, the molecular mechanisms behind this process remains elusive. Here we present crystal structures of engineered human Mfn1 containing the GTPase domain and a helical domain in different stages of GTP hydrolysis. The helical domain is composed of elements from widely dispersed sequence regions of Mfn1 and resembles the Neck of the bacterial dynamin-like protein. The structures reveal unique features of its catalytic machinery and explain how GTP binding induces conformational changes to promote G domain dimerization in the transition state. Disruption of G domain dimerization abolishes the fusogenic activity of Mfn1. Moreover, a conserved aspartate trigger was found in Mfn1 to affect mitochondrial elongation, likely through a GTP-loading-dependent domain rearrangement. Based on these results, we propose a mechanistic model for Mfn1-mediated mitochondrial tethering. Our study provides important insights in the molecular basis of mitochondrial fusion and mitofusin-related human neuromuscular disorders14.
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