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Capture at the ER-mitochondrial contacts licenses IP 3 receptors to stimulate local Ca 2+ transfer and oxidative metabolism.

Máté KatonaAdam BartokZuzana NichtovaGyörgy CsordásElena BerezhnayaDavid WeaverArijita GhoshPéter VárnaiDavid I YuleGyörgy Hajnóczky
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Endoplasmic reticulum-mitochondria contacts (ERMCs) are restructured in response to changes in cell state. While this restructuring has been implicated as a cause or consequence of pathology in numerous systems, the underlying molecular dynamics are poorly understood. Here, we show means to visualize the capture of motile IP 3 receptors (IP3Rs) at ERMCs and document the immediate consequences for calcium signaling and metabolism. IP3Rs are of particular interest because their presence provides a scaffold for ERMCs that mediate local calcium signaling, and their function outside of ERMCs depends on their motility. Unexpectedly, in a cell model with little ERMC Ca 2+ coupling, IP3Rs captured at mitochondria promptly mediate Ca 2+ transfer, stimulating mitochondrial oxidative metabolism. The Ca 2+ transfer does not require linkage with a pore-forming protein in the outer mitochondrial membrane. Thus, motile IP3Rs can traffic in and out of ERMCs, and, when 'parked', mediate calcium signal propagation to the mitochondria, creating a dynamic arrangement that supports local communication.
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