%0 Journal Article %T Neurolastin, a dynamin family GTPase, translocates to mitochondria upon neuronal stress and alters mitochondrial morphology in vivo. %A Lomash RM %A Petralia RS %A Holtzclaw LA %A Tsuda MC %A Wang YX %A Badger JD %A Cameron HA %A Youle RJ %A Roche KW %J J Biol Chem %V 294 %N 30 %D 07 2019 26 %M 31177092 暂无%R 10.1074/jbc.RA118.007245 %X Neurolastin is a dynamin family GTPase that also contains a RING domain and exhibits both GTPase and E3 ligase activities. It is specifically expressed in the brain and is important for synaptic transmission, as neurolastin knockout animals have fewer dendritic spines and exhibit a reduction in functional synapses. Our initial study of neurolastin revealed that it is membrane-associated and partially co-localizes with endosomes. Using various biochemical and cell-culture approaches, we now show that neurolastin also localizes to mitochondria in HeLa cells, cultured neurons, and brain tissue. We found that the mitochondrial localization of neurolastin depends upon an N-terminal mitochondrial targeting sequence and that neurolastin is imported into the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Although neurolastin was only partially mitochondrially localized at steady state, it displayed increased translocation to mitochondria in response to neuronal stress and mitochondrial fragmentation. Interestingly, inactivation or deletion of neurolastin's RING domain also increased its mitochondrial localization. Using EM, we observed that neurolastin knockout animals have smaller but more numerous mitochondria in cerebellar Purkinje neurons, indicating that neurolastin regulates mitochondrial morphology. We conclude that the brain-specific dynamin GTPase neurolastin exhibits stress-responsive localization to mitochondria and is required for proper mitochondrial morphology.