Summary: | Summary: Mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter (MCU)-mediated Ca2+ uptake promotes the buildup of reducing equivalents that fuel oxidative phosphorylation for cellular metabolism. Although MCU modulates mitochondrial bioenergetics, its function in energy homeostasis in vivo remains elusive. Here we demonstrate that deletion of the Mcu gene in mouse liver (MCUΔhep) and in Danio rerio by CRISPR/Cas9 inhibits mitochondrial Ca2+ (mCa2+) uptake, delays cytosolic Ca2+ (cCa2+) clearance, reduces oxidative phosphorylation, and leads to increased lipid accumulation. Elevated hepatic lipids in MCUΔhep were a direct result of extramitochondrial Ca2+-dependent protein phosphatase-4 (PP4) activity, which dephosphorylates AMPK. Loss of AMPK recapitulates hepatic lipid accumulation without changes in MCU-mediated Ca2+ uptake. Furthermore, reconstitution of active AMPK, or PP4 knockdown, enhances lipid clearance in MCUΔhep hepatocytes. Conversely, gain-of-function MCU promotes rapid mCa2+ uptake, decreases PP4 levels, and reduces hepatic lipid accumulation. Thus, our work uncovers an MCU/PP4/AMPK molecular cascade that links Ca2+ dynamics to hepatic lipid metabolism. : Hepatic mitochondrial Ca2+ shapes bioenergetics and lipid homeostasis. Tomar et al. demonstrate that MCU-mediated cCa2+ buffering serves as a crucial step in controlling hepatic fuel metabolism through an MCU/PP4/AMPK molecular cascade. Identification of these molecular signaling events aids in understanding how perturbation of mitochondrial ion homeostasis may contribute to the etiology of metabolic disorders. Keywords: mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter, calcium, bioenergetics, AMPK, MCU, hepatocyte, lipid metabolism, phosphatase, metabolic diseases, diabetes
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