Memory of neuronal mitochondrial stress being passed on to their descendants

The impact of the parental experiences has been observed to extend over multiple generations in various organisms. It is therefore of significant scientific interest to determine what environmental and physical conditions could induce transgenerational effects.
In a study published in Nature Cell Biology, Dr. Tian Ye's group from the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences revealed that neuronal mitochondrial stress signals can be transmitted to the mitochondria in the germline to potentially promote the maternal inheritance of elevated mtDNA levels across many generations in a Wnt signaling-dependent manner.
The researchers described a discovery from a serendipitous observation that neuronal mitochondrial stresses elicit a global induction of the UPRmt that can be transmitted to offspring for multiple generations (>50) in Caenorhabditis elegans even after the original stress signal has been gone.
The transgenerational induction of UPRmt was caused by the elevated mtDNA inherited maternally, which disturbed the balance between mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation subunits encoded by the mtDNA and the nuclear DNA to induce mitochondrial proteostasis stress. Wnt signaling is required for the propagation of elevated mtDNA levels across generations via transgenerational regulation of the mtDNA polymerase polg-1.
The transgenerational inheritance of the elevated mtDNA levels and the UPRmt enable their descendants to live longer and confer increased stress tolerance. However, there is clearly a cost of transgenerational UPRmt, animals with these transgenerational effects take a longer time to sexually mature and will produce less progeny. The presence of such a trade-off implies a fitness cost of inheritance of elevated mtDNA levels if stress conditions are not experienced in the near future.
This study showed a novel transgenerational inheritance of mitochondrial stress response, revealed the unexpected role of mtDNA content in transgenerational effects, and extended the understanding of Wnt signaling in the transmission of neuronal mitochondrial stress signals even across generations. It will be interesting to further investigate the interaction of Wnt signaling and the mtDNA copy numbers in the multigenerational plasticity related to mitochondrial physiology.
More information: Qian Zhang et al, The memory of neuronal mitochondrial stress is inherited transgenerationally via elevated mitochondrial DNA levels, Nature Cell Biology (2021).
Journal information: Nature Cell Biology
Provided by Chinese Academy of Sciences