Content area

Abstract

In mammals, the inheritance of mitochondrion and its DNA (mtDNA) is strictly maternal, despite the fact that a sperm can inject up to 100 functional mitochondria into the oocyte during fertilization. The mechanisms responsible for the elimination of the paternal mitochondria remain largely unknown. We report here that this paternal mitochondrial elimination process is conserved in Caenorhabditis elegans, and that the lysosomal pathway actively participates in this process. Molecular and cell biological analyses indicate that in wild-type animals paternal mitochondria and mtDNA are destroyed within two hours after fertilization. In animals with compromised lysosomes, paternal mitochondria persist until late embryonic stages. Therefore, the lysosomal pathway plays an important role in degrading paternal mitochondria introduced into the oocyte during fertilization. Our study indicates that C. elegans is an excellent animal model for understanding and dissecting this conserved biological process critical for animal development and reproduction.

Details

Title
Elimination of paternal mitochondria through the lysosomal degradation pathway in C. elegans
Author
Zhou, Qinghua; Li, Haimin; Xue, Ding
Pages
1662-9
Publication year
2011
Publication date
Dec 2011
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
10010602
e-ISSN
17487838
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
907055068
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Dec 2011