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Mitofusin 2: a regulator of energy expenditure that contributes to the development of obesity

The identification of new targets for obesity therapeutics represents a key priority for the pharmaceutical industry. This has been driven by the large and growing numbers of obese individuals around the world, the high incidence of serious co-morbidities, and a market predicted to reach $3.7 billion by 2008.

Obesity occurs when calorific intake exceeds energy expenditure. LeadDiscovery has recently analyzed two emerging anti-obesity targets, ghrelin which regulates food intake and the retinoids which also plays a role in both food intake as well as energy expenditure . The latter has attracted considerable interest with respect to obesity and since the mitochondria is responsible for cellular metabolism mitochondrial proteins have represented a focus of attention. For example the uncoupling proteins which uncouple substrate metabolism from ATP production has generated considerable interest. In this edition of TherapeuticAdvances we highlight another mitochondrial target, mitofusin, a protein which contributes to mitochondrial integrity.

In many cells and especially myocytes, mitochondria form elongated filaments or a branched reticulum. Researchers at the University of Barcelona and the associated spin-off, GeneXartis show that mitofusin 2 (Mfn2), a mitochondrial membrane protein that participates in mitochondrial fusion in mammalian cells, is induced during myogenesis and contributes to the maintenance and operation of the mitochondrial network. Repression of Mfn2 caused morphological and functional fragmentation of the mitochondrial network into independent clusters. Concomitantly, repression of Mfn2 reduced glucose oxidation, mitochondrial membrane potential, cell respiration and mitochondrial proton leak.

Perhaps of greatest interest with regards to pathology and therapeutics, the Mfn2-dependent mechanism of mitochondrial control is disturbed in obesity as a result of reduced Mfn2 expression. Decreased expression was found in both the skeletal muscle of Zucker obese rats and in obese humans and a negative linear relationship between Mfn2 mRNA levels and body mass index has been reported. These data therefore indicate that Mfn2 expression is crucial to mitochondrial metabolism through the maintenance of the mitochondrial network architecture, and reduced Mfn2 expression may explain some of the metabolic alterations associated with obesity. Further studies exploring the (dys)regulation of Mfn2 expression under control and obese conditions should hopefully lead to the identification of strategies able to increase mitochondrial metabolism and hence limit obesity.

Entry date March, 2003

Adapted from Bach et al, J Biol Chem 2003 Feb 21 - Interested in collaborating with this group? Contact LeadDiscovery or the authors direct.

Mitofusin-2 determines mitochondrial network architecture and mitochondrial metabolism: a novel regulatory mechanism altered in obesity.

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