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Cervical Cancer

Cell
Tissue Res. 2006 Nov 9; [Epub ahead of
print] Mitofusin 2 (Mfn2): a key player in insulin-dependent myogenesis in vitro. ·
Pawlikowska
P, Gajkowska
B, Orzechowski
A. Department of Physiological Sciences, Faculty of
Veterinary Medicine, Warsaw Agricultural University, Nowoursynowska
159, 02-776, Warsaw, Poland, orzechowski@alpha.sggw.waw.pl. We have previously shown that mitochondrial activity
increases in response to insulin in differentiating muscle cells. Moreover,
the protein kinase kinase/extracellular-signal-regulated
kinase (MAPKK/ERK-MEK) inhibitor PD98059
accelerates insulin-mediated myogenesis, whereas
the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K)
inhibitor LY294002 or blockade of mitochondrial respiration abrogates
insulin-mediated myogenesis. Our present study
focuses on the mitochondrial transmembrane
protein, hyperplasia suppressor gene/mitofusin2 (HSG/Mfn2), which regulates
both mitochondrial fusion (as demonstrated by perinuclear
mitochondria clustering) and insulin-dependent myogenesis
in vitro. Increased mitochondrial length and interconnectivity are not
observed after the inhibition of PI3-K activity with LY294002. Insulin
induces Mfn2 and subunits I and IV of cytochrome-c
oxidase (MTCOI and NCOIV) in L6 myoblasts. Inhibition of the MEK-dependent signalling pathway elevates the Mfn-2 protein level.
The molecular mechanism of this phenomenon is unknown, although immunoprecipitation studies indicate that, during
insulin-mediated myogenesis, Ras
protein (an upstream activator of the MAPK/ERK1/2 cascade) interacts with
HSG/Mfn2 in muscle cells. Interaction of Ras with
Mfn2 continues unless insulin is present and is reduced after PD98059
co-treatment indicating that insulin-mediated myogenesis
is increased by the inhibition of MEK, most probably by the lack of mitogenic signals opposing muscle differentiation. We
conclude that insulin-mediated myogenesis depends
on PI3-K activity, which stimulates mitochondrial activity and the
extensive fusion of mitochondria. We further suggest that insulin
stimulates the expression of Mfn2 protein, which in turn binds to Ras and inhibits the MEK-dependent signalling
pathway. At the same time, the PI3-K-dependent signalling
pathway is boosted, mitochondrial respiration increases and the rate of myogenesis is accelerated. PMID: 17093923 [PubMed - as
supplied by publisher]