| Literature DB >> 26240337 |
Yuji Takihara1, Masaru Inatani2, Kei Eto3, Toshihiro Inoue4, Alexander Kreymerman5, Seiji Miyake6, Shinji Ueno7, Masatoshi Nagaya7, Ayami Nakanishi7, Keiichiro Iwao4, Yoshihiro Takamura6, Hirotaka Sakamoto8, Keita Satoh8, Mineo Kondo9, Tatsuya Sakamoto8, Jeffrey L Goldberg5, Junichi Nabekura3, Hidenobu Tanihara4.
Abstract
The lack of intravital imaging of axonal transport of mitochondria in the mammalian CNS precludes characterization of the dynamics of axonal transport of mitochondria in the diseased and aged mammalian CNS. Glaucoma, the most common neurodegenerative eye disease, is characterized by axon degeneration and the death of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and by an age-related increase in incidence. RGC death is hypothesized to result from disturbances in axonal transport and in mitochondrial function. Here we report minimally invasive intravital multiphoton imaging of anesthetized mouse RGCs through the sclera that provides sequential time-lapse images of mitochondria transported in a single axon with submicrometer resolution. Unlike findings from explants, we show that the axonal transport of mitochondria is highly dynamic in the mammalian CNS in vivo under physiological conditions. Furthermore, in the early stage of glaucoma modeled in adult (4-mo-old) mice, the number of transported mitochondria decreases before RGC death, although transport does not shorten. However, with increasing age up to 23-25 mo, mitochondrial transport (duration, distance, and duty cycle) shortens. In axons, mitochondria-free regions increase and lengths of transported mitochondria decrease with aging, although totally organized transport patterns are preserved in old (23- to 25-mo-old) mice. Moreover, axonal transport of mitochondria is more vulnerable to glaucomatous insults in old mice than in adult mice. These mitochondrial changes with aging may underlie the age-related increase in glaucoma incidence. Our method is useful for characterizing the dynamics of axonal transport of mitochondria and may be applied to other submicrometer structures in the diseased and aged mammalian CNS in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: aging; in vivo imaging; mammalian CNS; mitochondrial axonal transport; neurodegeneration
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26240337 PMCID: PMC4547257 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1509879112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205