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Impaired mitochondria-initiated crosstalk with lysosomes reciprocally aggravates mitochondrial defect through LManVI

Nature Communications. 2025-08; 
Shengnan Li, Zhaoliang Shan, Guochun Zhao, Yuwei Li, Minghui Du, Xiuxiu Ti, Yuxue Gao, Wenting Li, Hui Zuo, Yan Wang, Qing Zhang State Key Laboratory of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology and MOE Key Laboratory of Model Animals for Disease Study, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Molecular Medicine, Model Animal Research Center, School of Medicine, Nanjing University
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Catalog Antibodies The primary antibodies used were mouse anti-HA (1:1000; Santa Cruz, sc-7392); mouse anti-Flag (1:1000, Sigma, F4049); mouse anti-CathepsinD (1:1000; Santa Cruz, sc-377299); mouse anti-β-actin (1:10,000, GenScript, A00702); Get A Quote

Abstract

Mitochondria coordinate with lysosomes to maintain cellular homeomstasis. However, in mitochondrial defect condition, how they communicate is less clear. Here, utilizing dMterf4 RNAi fly model, we find that expression of lysosomal alpha-mannosidase VI (LManVI) is significantly downregulated. Mechanistically, we show that dMterf4 RNAi-triggered mitochondrial defect mediates downregulation of lysosomal LManVI through Med8/Tfb4-E(z)/pho axis, causing impairment of lysosomal function. Reciprocally, downregulation of lysosomal LManVI further decreases many mitochondrial genes expression through downregulation of transcriptional coactivator PGC-1, leading to aggravating the dMterf4 RNAi-mediated mitochondrial defect,... More

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