![]() Received: Accepted: AugPublished: October 25, 2012Ĭopyright: © 2012 Sukhorukov et al. Medical College of Wisconsin, United States of America Because of the high morphological sensitivity to minute changes in fusion or fission rates close to the critical point, cells can quickly adapt the mitochondrial operation and structure to their actual needs at a low expenditure of energy.Ĭitation: Sukhorukov VM, Dikov D, Reichert AS, Meyer-Hermann M (2012) Emergence of the Mitochondrial Reticulum from Fission and Fusion Dynamics. Further analysis reveals that for a specific value of tip-to-side fission/fusion rates the network should undergo a radical reorganization. This opens a way for the quantitative characterization of the large-scale organization by showing how particular types of the internal dynamics can shape the reticulum into the whole multitude of configurations observed in biological studies. We address this shortcoming with a mathematical model representing the organelle as a cell-wide dynamical network subjected to opposing actions of fission and internal fusion – processes known experimentally but not yet accurately specified. Despite extensive knowledge of mitochondrial physiology, accurate description of their large-scale architecture is missing, partly due to substantial variability of reticulum geometries found in different cell types, and a capability for fast radical changes. Most often, they form a constantly reshaping tubular reticulum spread over the cytosol. Mitochondria control energy production, initiation of cell death and several other critical cellular processes. Analysis of the reticulum adaptive configuration offers a direct clarification for its impact on numerous physiological processes strongly dependent on mitochondrial dynamics and organization, such as efficiency of cellular metabolism, tissue differentiation and aging. It forms a basis for understanding the architecture of mitochondria as a cell-wide but inhomogeneous organelle. The detailed size distribution of the network components predicted by the dynamic graph representation introduces a relationship between chondriome characteristics and cell function. Intrinsic morphological instability of the mitochondrial reticulum resulting from its vicinity to the percolation transition is proposed as a novel mechanism that can be utilized by cells for optimizing their functional competence via dynamic remodeling of the chondriome. The computational analysis indicates that mitochondrial networks exhibit a percolation threshold. Using both mean-field deterministic and explicit stochastic mathematical methods we establish a relationship between the chondriome structural network characteristics and underlying kinetic rate parameters. Subsequently, we introduce a graph-based model of the chondriome able to encompass its inherent variability in a single framework. On the basis of experimentally determined structural features we establish the tip-to-tip and tip-to-side fission and fusion events as dominant reactions in the motility of this organelle. Here we address the principles of formation and the large-scale organization of the cell-wide network of mitochondria. Currently, quantitative understanding of its morphological characteristics is largely absent, despite major progress in deciphering the molecular fission and fusion machineries shaping its structure. Mitochondria form a dynamic tubular reticulum within eukaryotic cells.
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