| Literature DB >> 30778282 |
Xiu-Yun Zhao1,2, Mei-Hong Lu1,2, De-Juan Yuan1,3, De-En Xu4, Pei-Pei Yao1,2, Wen-Li Ji1,2, Hong Chen1,2, Wen-Long Liu1,2, Chen-Xiao Yan1,2, Yi-Yuan Xia1,2, Shao Li3, Jin Tao1,5, Quan-Hong Ma1.
Abstract
Mitochondria are the double membrane organelles providing most of the energy for cells. In addition, mitochondria also play essential roles in various cellular biological processes such as calcium signaling, apoptosis, ROS generation, cell growth, and cell cycle. Mitochondrial dysfunction is observed in various neurological disorders which harbor acute and chronic neural injury such as neurodegenerative diseases and ischemia, hypoxia-induced brain injury. In this review, we describe how mitochondrial dysfunction contributes to the pathogenesis of neurological disorders which manifest chronic or acute neural injury.Entities:
Keywords: mitochondria; mitochondrial dysfunction; neural injury; neurodegeneration; neurological disorders
Year: 2019 PMID: 30778282 PMCID: PMC6369908 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2019.00030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Roles of MPTP in ischemia. In the ischemia, MPTP is open, which leads to loss of the membrane potential and the rupture of OMM. The damaged mitochondria exhibit reduced ATP generation, impaired MRC and increased Ca2+ flux which results in elevated generation of ROS and apoptosis respectively. It is worth noting that elevated ROS levels and apoptosis in turn further exacerbate the damages on MPTP.
Compounds targeting mitochondria in the treatment of ischemia, PD, and AD.
| Compounds | Mechanisms of action | Disorders | Therapeutic effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyclosporine A | Inhibiting MPTP | Ischemia-caused acute brain injury | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Tirilazad mesylate | Lipid peroxidation inhibitor | Ischemia-caused brain injury | Effective in pre-clinical models; showing no effective in clinical studies | |
| Edaravone | Free radical scavenger | Ischemia-caused brain injury | Exhibited clinical improvements in acute ischemic stroke patients | Edaravone Acute Infarction Study Group, 2003 |
| Lubeluzole | Reduces NO levels and subsequent ONOO- production | Ischemia-caused brain injury | Effective in pre-clinical models; showing no effective in clinical studies | |
| DPQ | Inhibiting PARP-1 | Ischemia-caused brain injury | Pre-clinical studies; partial protection against the pathological process | |
| Mdivi-1 | Inhibitor of Drp-1 | Ischemia-caused brain injury | Pre-clinical studies; controversial effect | |
| 3-MA | Inhibiting autophagy/mitophagy | Ischemia-caused brain injury | Pre-clinical studies; controversial effect | |
| Rapamycin | Autophagy/mitophgy inducer through suppressing mTOR | Ischemia-caused brain injury | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Selegiline | Inhibiting monoamine oxidase-B (MAO-B) and antioxidant | Parkinson’s disease | Beneficial effect and significantly delaying the time of using levodopa | |
| Rasagiline | MAO-B inhibitor | Parkinson’s disease | Change the Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) modestly | |
| Antioxidant | Parkinson’s disease | Improved UPDRS moderately | ||
| Mitoquinone | Mitochondrial targeted antioxidant | Parkinson’s disease | Protected dopaminergic neurons in a 6-OHDA-induced model of PD; but no effective in clinical studies | |
| Ubiquinone | Antioxidant | Parkinson’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Creatine | Antioxidant | Parkinson’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Curcumin | Antioxidant | Alzheimer’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Mitoquinone | Mitochondria-targeted antioxidant | Alzheimer’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| CoQ10/Ubisol-Q10 | Antioxidants | Alzheimer’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Idebenone | An analog of CoQ10 | Alzheimer’s disease | Effective in clinical trails | |
| Nicotinamide riboside (NR) | NAD+ precursors | Alzheimer’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) | NAD+ precursors | Alzheimer’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Rapamycin | Autophagy/mitophgy inducer through suppressing mTOR | Alzheimer’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| Trehalose | mTOR-independent autophagy/mitophgy inducer | Alzheimer’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
| 2, 4- Dinitrophenol (DNP) | Mitochondrial uncoupling agents | Alzheimer’s disease | Pre-clinical studies | |
FIGURE 2Mechanisms underlying that ROS induced apoptosis. Excessive ROS can cause apoptosis via multiple ways: enhancing lipid peroxidation. Releasing of Cytc. Enhancing mitochondrial permeabilization. Activation of NF-KB/MAPK/JNK pathway. Damaging DNA directly.
FIGURE 3Aβ causes mitochondrial dysfunction via multiple mechanisms. Aβ is imported to the mitochondria through interacting with TOM40 and TIM20, eventually localizing cross mitochondrial membrane. Aβ decreases COX activity. Aβ decreases ATP generation via binding to ATP synthase subunit α. Aβ increases NO generation, which results in S-nitrosylation of DLP. Aβ increases the expression of Fis1. Through and , Aβ enhances mitochondrial fission. Aβ decreases the expression of Mfn1/2 and OPA1, through which Aβ suppresses mitochondrial fusion. Aβ regulates mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) via forming an interacting complex with ANT, cyclophilin D (Cyc D) and VADC, the core components of MPTP. Aβ interacts with ABAD, preventing NAD+ to ABAD, thereby changing MTP and decreasing the activities of RC. Aβ suppresses nutrients induced mitochondrial activity through regulation mTOR activity. Aβ impairs mitophagy through downregulation of DISC1 and PINK1.