Publication | Closed Access
Dual role of mitochondria in producing melatonin and driving GPCR signaling to block cytochrome c release
395
Citations
39
References
2017
Year
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are classically characterized as cell-surface receptors transmitting extracellular signals into cells. Here we show that central components of a GPCR signaling system comprised of the melatonin type 1 receptor (MT<sub>1</sub>), its associated G protein, and β-arrestins are on and within neuronal mitochondria. We discovered that the ligand melatonin is exclusively synthesized in the mitochondrial matrix and released by the organelle activating the mitochondrial MT<sub>1</sub> signal-transduction pathway inhibiting stress-mediated cytochrome <i>c</i> release and caspase activation. These findings coupled with our observation that mitochondrial MT<sub>1</sub> overexpression reduces ischemic brain injury in mice delineate a mitochondrial GPCR mechanism contributing to the neuroprotective action of melatonin. We propose a new term, "automitocrine," analogous to "autocrine" when a similar phenomenon occurs at the cellular level, to describe this unexpected intracellular organelle ligand-receptor pathway that opens a new research avenue investigating mitochondrial GPCR biology.
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2013 | 831 | |
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2009 | 571 | |
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