MTCH2-mediated mitochondrial fusion drives exit from naïve pluripotency in embryonic stem cells

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Abstract

The role of mitochondria dynamics and its molecular regulators remains largely unknown during naïve-to-primed pluripotent cell interconversion. Here we report that mitochondrial MTCH2 is a regulator of mitochondrial fusion, essential for the naïve-to-primed interconversion of murine embryonic stem cells (ESCs). During this interconversion, wild-type ESCs elongate their mitochondria and slightly alter their glutamine utilization. In contrast, MTCH2−/− ESCs fail to elongate their mitochondria and to alter their metabolism, maintaining high levels of histone acetylation and expression of naïve pluripotency markers. Importantly, enforced mitochondria elongation by the pro-fusion protein Mitofusin (MFN) 2 or by a dominant negative form of the pro-fission protein dynamin-related protein (DRP) 1 is sufficient to drive the exit from naïve pluripotency of both MTCH2−/− and wild-type ESCs. Taken together, our data indicate that mitochondria elongation, governed by MTCH2, plays a critical role and constitutes an early driving force in the naïve-to-primed pluripotency interconversion of murine ESCs.

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Bahat, A., Goldman, A., Zaltsman, Y., Khan, D. H., Halperin, C., Amzallag, E., … Gross, A. (2018). MTCH2-mediated mitochondrial fusion drives exit from naïve pluripotency in embryonic stem cells. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-07519-w

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