MYC and mitochondrial biogenesis

F Morrish, D Hockenbery - Cold Spring …, 2014 - perspectivesinmedicine.cshlp.org
F Morrish, D Hockenbery
Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in medicine, 2014perspectivesinmedicine.cshlp.org
Mitochondria, the powerhouses of the cell, face two imperatives concerning biogenesis. The
first is the requirement for dividing cells to replicate their mitochondrial content by growth of
existing mitochondria. The second is the dynamic regulation of mitochondrial content in
response to organismal and cellular cues (eg, exercise, caloric restriction, energy status,
temperature). MYC provides the clearest example of a programmed expansion of
mitochondrial content linked to the cell cycle. As an oncogene, MYC also presents intriguing …
Mitochondria, the powerhouses of the cell, face two imperatives concerning biogenesis. The first is the requirement for dividing cells to replicate their mitochondrial content by growth of existing mitochondria. The second is the dynamic regulation of mitochondrial content in response to organismal and cellular cues (e.g., exercise, caloric restriction, energy status, temperature). MYC provides the clearest example of a programmed expansion of mitochondrial content linked to the cell cycle. As an oncogene, MYC also presents intriguing questions about the role of its mitochondrial targets in cancer-related phenotypes, such as the Warburg effect and MYC-dependent apoptosis.
perspectivesinmedicine.cshlp.org