Current Biology
Volume 23, Issue 23, 2 December 2013, Pages 2417-2422
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Actin Dynamics Affect Mitochondrial Quality Control and Aging in Budding Yeast

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2013.10.022Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • RACF prevents inheritance of more-oxidized, less-motile mitochondria in dividing yeast

  • Increasing RACF rates promotes mitochondrial and cellular fitness and extends lifespan

  • Sir2p is required for normal RACF and mitochondrial fitness

  • Increasing RACF in sir2Δ cells promotes mitochondrial fitness and cellular healthspan

Summary

Actin cables of budding yeast are bundles of F-actin that extend from the bud tip or neck to the mother cell tip, serve as tracks for bidirectional cargo transport, and undergo continuous movement from buds toward mother cells [1]. This movement, retrograde actin cable flow (RACF), is similar to retrograde actin flow in lamellipodia, growth cones, immunological synapses, dendritic spines, and filopodia [2, 3, 4, 5]. In all cases, actin flow is driven by the push of actin polymerization and assembly at the cell cortex, and myosin-driven pulling forces deeper within the cell [6, 7, 8, 9, 10]. Therefore, for movement and inheritance from mothers to buds, mitochondria must “swim upstream” against the opposing force of RACF [11]. We find that increasing RACF rates results in increased fitness of mitochondria inherited by buds and that the increase in mitochondrial fitness leads to extended replicative lifespan and increased cellular healthspan. The sirtuin SIR2 is required for normal RACF and mitochondrial fitness, and increasing RACF rates in sir2Δ cells increases mitochondrial fitness and cellular healthspan but does not affect replicative lifespan. These studies support the model that RACF serves as a filter for segregation of fit from less-fit mitochondria during inheritance, which controls cellular lifespan and healthspan. They also support a role for Sir2p in these processes.

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