Mitochondrial dysfunction is a hallmark of aging and a key contributor to age-related diseases including cardiovascular disease. However, molecular pathways that safeguard mitochondrial homeostasis in the aging heart remain poorly understood. Here, we identify MTFR1L as a regulator of mitophagy that binds p-S65-Ub, a key signal amplifying the PINK1/Parkin axis. We find that MTFR1L is enriched in metabolically active tissues, particularly in the heart, where it regulates Parkin signaling. Genetic deletion of Mtfr1l in mice impairs stress-induced mitophagy and Parkin activation, leading to accumulation of damaged mitochondria, increased inflammation and senescence, and accelerated age-related cardiac dysfunction. Strikingly, cardiac expression of MTFR1L progressively decreases along with aging in mice, primates, and humans, coinciding with cardiomyocyte senescence and lipofuscin accumulation. Together, these findings uncover a role for MTFR1L in regulation of the p-S65-Ub/Parkin mitophagy axis and maintenance of mitochondrial homeostasis during cardiac aging and suggest that age-associated loss of MTFR1L may contribute to age-related cardiac dysfunction. Based on these findings, we propose a therapeutic paradigm for the prevention of heart aging by restoring MTFR1L function.
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Le Shi
Johns Hopkins University
Yuying Li
Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University
Yingxue Cao
Sun Yat-sen University
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Johns Hopkins University
McGill University
Karolinska Institutet
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Shi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6977032e722626c4468e842a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2527247123