RRC ID 87999
Author Balachandar Thendral S, Bacot S, Morton KS, Chi Q, Kenny-Ganzert IW, Meyer JN, Sherwood DR.
Title Programmed mitophagy at the oocyte-to-zygote transition promotes species immortality.
Journal Res Sq
Abstract The quality of mitochondria inherited from the oocyte determines embryonic viability, metabolic health throughout progeny lifetime, and future generation endurance. High levels of endogenous reactive oxygen species and exogenous toxicants are threats to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in fully developed oocytes. Deleterious mtDNA is commonly detected in developed oocytes, but is absent in embryos, suggesting the existence of a cryptic purifying selection mechanism. Here we discover that in C. elegans, the onset of oocyte-to-zygote transition (OZT) developmentally triggers a rapid mitophagy event. We show that mitophagy at OZT (MOZT) requires mitochondrial fragmentation, the macroautophagy pathway, and the mitophagy receptor FUNDC1, but not the prevalent mitophagy factors PINK1 and BNIP3. Impaired MOZT leads to increased deleterious mtDNA inheritance and decreases embryonic survival. Inherited mtDNA damage accumulates across generations, leading to the extinction of descendent populations. Thus, MOZT represents a strategy that preserves mitochondrial health during the mother-to-offspring transmission and promotes species continuity.
Published 2025-4-9
DOI 10.21203/rs.3.rs-6330979/v1
PII rs.3.rs-6330979
PMID 40297685
PMC PMC12036463
Resource
C.elegans tm1779 tm177981