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Saturated fatty acids increase LPI to reduce FUNDC1 dimerization and stability and mitochondrial function.

Linbo ChenQianping ZhangYuanyuan MengTian ZhaoChenglong MuChangying FuCaijuan DengJianyu FengSiling DuWei LiuGuangfeng GengKaili MaHongcheng ChengQiangqiang LiuQian LuoJiaojiao ZhangZhanqiang DuLin CaoHui WangYong LiuJian-Ping LinGuo ChenLei LiuSin Man LamGuang-Hou ShuiYushan ZhuQuan Chen
Published in: EMBO reports (2023)
Ectopic lipid deposition and mitochondrial dysfunction are common etiologies of obesity and metabolic disorders. Excessive dietary uptake of saturated fatty acids (SFAs) causes mitochondrial dysfunction and metabolic disorders, while unsaturated fatty acids (UFAs) counterbalance these detrimental effects. It remains elusive how SFAs and UFAs differentially signal toward mitochondria for mitochondrial performance. We report here that saturated dietary fatty acids such as palmitic acid (PA), but not unsaturated oleic acid (OA), increase lysophosphatidylinositol (LPI) production to impact on the stability of the mitophagy receptor FUNDC1 and on mitochondrial quality. Mechanistically, PA shifts FUNDC1 from dimer to monomer via enhanced production of LPI. Monomeric FUNDC1 shows increased acetylation at K104 due to dissociation of HDAC3 and increased interaction with Tip60. Acetylated FUNDC1 can be further ubiquitinated by MARCH5 for proteasomal degradation. Conversely, OA antagonizes PA-induced accumulation of LPI, and FUNDC1 monomerization and degradation. A fructose-, palmitate-, and cholesterol-enriched (FPC) diet also affects FUNDC1 dimerization and promotes its degradation in a non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) mouse model. We thus uncover a signaling pathway that orchestrates lipid metabolism with mitochondrial quality.
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