Jump to Main Contents
ncc en
HOME > Publication & Reports > Annual Report 2020 > Research Institute

Annual Report 2020

Division of Cancer Biology

Hirofumi Arakawa, Yasuyuki Nakamura, Naoki Ikari, Yoko Sagami, Katsuko Honjo, Takahiro Shibata, Hidefumi Suzuki

Research activities

Mieap-regulated mitochondrial quality control

 Mitochondria-eating protein (Mieap, also designated as SPATA18) was originally identified as a p53-inducible protein; its mRNA expression is directly regulated by the tumor suppressor p53 in response to various cellular stresses, including DNA damage (PLoS ONE 6: e16054, 2011). Mieap expression is lost in nearly 50% of human cancer cell lines due to promoter methylation. Mieap-deficient LS174T colorectal cancer cells exhibit increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and decreased mitochondrial ATP synthesis. The mitochondrial ROS in the Mieap-deficient colorectal cancer and gastric cancer cells enhance the migration and invasion activities of the cancer cells under hypoxic conditions (Oncogenesis 5: e181, 2016; Scientific Reports 9: 2822, 2019). Mieap-deficient ApcMin/+ mice exhibit the promotion of intestinal tumor initiation and malignant transformation (Scientific Reports 5: 12472, 2015). The tumors in Mieap-deficient ApcMin/+ mice have revealed abnormal morphology of the mitochondria, such as enlargement of the size, round shape, and decrease in cristae structure. Recently, Mieap expression was reported to be defective in thyroid oncocytic cell tumors, which exhibit accumulation of abnormal mitochondria in tumor cells (Cancer Sci. 111: 2814–2823, 2020). Mieap-regulated mitochondrial quality control is inactivated in the tumor tissues of nearly 70% colorectal cancer and 25% breast cancer patients (Oncogenesis 5: e181, 2016; Cancer Sci. 109: 3910–3920, 2018). These observations suggest that Mieap plays a critical role in tumor suppression via its mitochondrial quality control function. However, the mechanism underlying the regulation of mitochondrial quality control by Mieap remains unclear.

Liquid droplets function as membrane-less organelles in cells

 Liquid droplets (LDs) in cells are protein condensates, which are composed of proteins, nucleic acids, and other macromolecular components. LDs are formed by proteins with an intrinsically disordered region(s) (IDR) via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) (Figure 1). Importantly, LDs function as membraneless organelles that compartmentalize and facilitate cellular biological reactions (Figure 2). LDs are not surrounded by a lipid bilayer structure, which enables dynamic exchange of reactants and products with their surroundings, facilitating biological reactions in cells. Furthermore, theoretically, LDs are able to appear and disappear anywhere within a cell in response to cellular stress and/or subcellular circumstances, exhibiting spatiotemporal dynamic properties (Figure 3). On the basis of these features, the concept of membraneless organelles is fundamentally different from the long-standing concept of membrane-bound organelles, such as the nucleus, lysosome, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum, which stably exist and strictly segregate biomolecules and biological reactions by a lipid bilayer structure. It is suggested that a number of membraneless organelles may exist within a cell, which could regulate various cellular biological reactions and activities, including transcriptional regulation, signal transduction, immunity, centrosome activity, and mitosis. This list is now rapidly growing.

Figure 1. Liquid droplets are induced by liquid-liquid phase separation
Figure 1. Liquid droplets are induced by liquid-liquid phase separation

Figure 1. Liquid droplets are induced by liquid-liquid phase separation
Figure 1. Liquid droplets are induced by liquid-liquid phase separation

Figure 2. Droplets function as membrane-less organelles
Figure 2. Droplets function as membrane-less organelles

Figure 2. Droplets function as membrane-less organelles
Figure 2. Droplets function as membrane-less organelles

Figure 3. Membrane-less organelles exhibit spatiotemporal and dynamic properties
Figure 3. Membrane-less organelles exhibit spatiotemporal and dynamic properties

Figure 3. Membrane-less organelles exhibit spatiotemporal and dynamic properties
Figure 3. Membrane-less organelles exhibit spatiotemporal and dynamic properties

Cardiolipin is a unique and important phospholipid that is specific to mitochondria

 Cardiolipin (CL) is a phospholipid dimer, which has two phosphate residues and four fatty acyl chains. Because of this unique structure, it forms a cone shape, which plays a critical role in forming the curvature of the lipid membrane, contributing to the maintenance of the mitochondrial cristae structure. CL is the only phospholipid that is specific to the mitochondria and is mainly located at the inner mitochondrial membrane and contact sites. CL interacts with many mitochondrial membrane proteins, including the electron transport chain complexes involved in oxidative phosphorylation and the ADP/ATP carrier; the interaction with CL promotes the activity of these proteins. CL stabilizes the structural assembly and activity of the respiratory super-complexes at the inner mitochondrial membrane. CL interacts with cytochrome c at the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane, which plays a pivotal role in the life and death of cells by maintaining stable respiratory ATP production and inducing apoptosis, respectively. Therefore, altered CL metabolism and/or deterioration of CL quality causes various mitochondrial dysfunctions and diseases via abnormal cristae structures, decreased ATP synthesis activity, and increased ROS generation.

Mieap forms membraneless organelles to compartmentalize and facilitate cardiolipin metabolism

 This year, we reported that Mieap is an IDR-containing protein that drives the formation of liquid droplets in the mitochondria (bioRxiv doi: 10.1101/2020.10.26.354365). Mieap liquid droplets (MLDs) specifically phase separate the mitochondrial phospholipid cardiolipin. Lipidomic analysis of cardiolipin suggested that Mieap promotes enzymatic reactions involved in cardiolipin metabolism, including biosynthesis and remodeling. Accordingly, four cardiolipin biosynthesis enzymes (TAMM41, PGS1, PTPMT1, and CRLS1) and two remodeling enzymes (PLA2G6 and TAZ) are phase separated by MLDs. Mieap-deficient mice exhibited altered cristae structure in the liver and kidney mitochondria and a trend of obesity. These results suggest that Mieap drives the formation of membraneless organelles to compartmentalize and promotes cardiolipin metabolism at the inner mitochondrial membrane, thus playing a possible role in mitochondrial quality control.

Future Prospects

 So far, autophagy and proteostasis are two major mechanisms in mitochondrial quality control. In addition to these, we suggest that the Mieap-regulated pathway is the third mechanism for mitochondrial quality control, in which Mieap maintains the integrity of mitochondria by regulating CL metabolism. Mieap maintains mitochondrial quality through homeostasis of the inner mitochondrial membrane by regulating CL metabolism, stabilizing oxidative phosphorylation, and suppressing mitochondrial ROS generation (Figure 4). Considering the role of Mieap in p53 function, we suggest that Mieap could act as a spatiotemporal and dynamic regulator/modulator in CL metabolism to suppress tumor initiation and progression.

Figure 4. Mieap suppresses cancer via regulating CL metabolism
Figure 4. Mieap suppresses cancer via regulating CL metabolism

Figure 4. Mieap suppresses cancer via regulating CL metabolism
Figure 4. Mieap suppresses cancer via regulating CL metabolism

List of papers published in 2020

Journal

1. Sano H, Futamura M, Gaowa S, Kamino H, Nakamura Y, Yamaguchi K, Tanaka Y, Yasufuku I, Nakakami A, Arakawa H, Yoshida K. p53/Mieap-regulated mitochondrial quality control plays an important role as a tumor suppressor in gastric and esophageal cancers. Biochem Biophys Res Commun, 529:582-589, 2020