Literature DB >> 15798370

Reactive oxygen species production in the mitochondrial matrix: implications for the mechanism of mitochondrial mutation accumulation.

Aubrey D N J de Grey1.   

Abstract

The vicious cycle theory postulates that typical mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations cause their host mitochondria to generate more superoxide and other reactive oxygen species (ROS) than do normal mitochondria, thereby promoting the occurrence of additional mtDNA mutations at an ever-accelerating rate. However, nearly all the loss-of-function mtDNA mutations seen in vivo are large deletions, which (as the original statement of the theory indeed noted, though this has been widely overlooked) should not trigger a vicious cycle because they will prevent the assembly of the potentially superoxide-generating enzyme complexes. Consistent with this is the observation that each cell exhibiting loss of mtDNA-encoded function in vivo contains copies of a single, evidently clonally expanded, mutant mtDNA species, whereas the vicious cycle theory predicts a spectrum of mutant forms in each cell. Two recent papers, however, unveil a way in which mtDNA mutations could indeed promote ROS production of their host mitochondria. MtDNA mutations probably shift the intramitochondrial NAD(+)/NADH redox couple towards NADH, and this is now shown in vitro to cause ROS production by alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, an essential enzyme of the TCA cycle. This does not revive the vicious cycle theory, but it has complex implications for the two most plausible more recent theories, known as "survival of the slowest" and "crippled mitochondria." It may also prove to explain other recent observations in mitochondrially mutant cells in vivo.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15798370     DOI: 10.1089/rej.2005.8.13

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rejuvenation Res        ISSN: 1549-1684            Impact factor:   4.663


  10 in total

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2.  Antipsychotic-induced oxidative stress in rat brain.

Authors:  Márcio R Martins; Fabrícia C Petronilho; Karin M Gomes; Felipe Dal-Pizzol; Emilio L Streck; João Quevedo
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Authors:  Renee Ho; Lyudmila I Rachek; Yi Xu; Mark R Kelley; Susan P LeDoux; Glenn L Wilson
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4.  Patterns of persistent DNA damage associated with sun exposure and the glutathione S-transferase M1 genotype in melanoma patients.

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Review 5.  The neglected significance of "antioxidative stress".

Authors:  B Poljsak; I Milisav
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Authors:  Anna V Kudryavtseva; George S Krasnov; Alexey A Dmitriev; Boris Y Alekseev; Olga L Kardymon; Asiya F Sadritdinova; Maria S Fedorova; Anatoly V Pokrovsky; Nataliya V Melnikova; Andrey D Kaprin; Alexey A Moskalev; Anastasiya V Snezhkina
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Review 7.  A Bird's-Eye View of the Multiple Biochemical Mechanisms that Propel Pathology of Alzheimer's Disease: Recent Advances and Mechanistic Perspectives on How to Halt the Disease Progression Targeting Multiple Pathways.

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Review 8.  Mitochondrial DNA Repair in Neurodegenerative Diseases and Ageing.

Authors:  Veronica Bazzani; Mara Equisoain Redin; Joshua McHale; Lorena Perrone; Carlo Vascotto
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9.  Mitochondrial Efficiency-Dependent Viability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mutants Carrying Individual Electron Transport Chain Component Deletions.

Authors:  Young-Yon Kwon; Kyung-Mi Choi; ChangYeon Cho; Cheol-Koo Lee
Journal:  Mol Cells       Date:  2015-11-24       Impact factor: 5.034

10.  Somatic mtDNA variation is an important component of Parkinson's disease.

Authors:  Jonathan Coxhead; Marzena Kurzawa-Akanbi; Rafiqul Hussain; Angela Pyle; Patrick Chinnery; Gavin Hudson
Journal:  Neurobiol Aging       Date:  2015-11-06       Impact factor: 4.673

  10 in total

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