Metabolism
Neurologic Dysfunction and Male Infertility in Drosophila porin Mutants: A NEW MODEL FOR MITOCHONDRIAL DYSFUNCTION AND DISEASE*

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Voltage-dependent anion channels (VDACs) are a family of small pore-forming proteins of the mitochondrial outer membrane found in all eukaryotes. VDACs play an important role in the regulated flux of metabolites between the cytosolic and mitochondrial compartments, and three distinct mammalian isoforms have been identified. Animal and cell culture experiments suggest that the various isoforms act in disparate roles such as apoptosis, synaptic plasticity, learning, muscle bioenergetics, and reproduction. In Drosophila melanogaster, porin is the ubiquitously expressed VDAC isoform. Through imprecise excision of a P element insertion in the porin locus, a series of hypomorphic alleles have been isolated, and analyses of flies homozygous for these mutant alleles reveal phenotypes remarkably reminiscent of mouse VDAC mutants. These include partial lethality, defects of mitochondrial respiration, abnormal muscle mitochondrial morphology, synaptic dysfunction, and male infertility, which are features often observed in human mitochondrial disorders. Furthermore, the observed synaptic dysfunction at the neuromuscular junction in porin mutants is associated with a paucity of mitochondria in presynaptic termini. The similarity of VDAC mutant phenotypes in the fly and mouse clearly indicate a fundamental conservation of VDAC function. The establishment and validation of a new in vivo model for VDAC function in Drosophila should provide a valuable tool for further genetic dissection of VDAC role(s) in mitochondrial biology and disease, and as a model of mitochondrial disorders potentially amenable to the development of treatment strategies.

Bioenergetics/Respiratory Chain
Metabolism/Energy
Organisms/Drosophila
Subcellular Organelles/Mitochondria
Neuron
VDAC
Male Infertility
Mitochondrial Disease
Porin

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*

This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grants K08 HD44808 (to B. H. G.) and R01 NS0423193 (to W. J. C.). This work was also supported by March of Dimes FY-99-323 (to W. J. C.), Fund for Scientific Research Flanders (FWO, G.0747.09) (to P. V.), Research Fund Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (P. V.), a Marie Curie Excellence Grant (MEXT-CT-2006-042267) (to P. V.), The Baylor College of Medicine Mental Retardation Developmental Disabilities Research Center (MRDDRC HD024064), and VIB (to P. V.).

The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplemental “Experimental Procedures,” Tables S1 and S2, Figs. S1–S3, and additional references.