| Literature DB >> 31089338 |
Wenyan Fu1,2, Yang Liu1,2, Hang Yin1,2.
Abstract
Stem cells have the unique capacity to differentiate into many cell types during embryonic development and postnatal growth. Through coordinated cellular behaviors (self-renewal, proliferation, and differentiation), stem cells are also pivotal to the homeostasis, repair, and regeneration of many adult tissues/organs and thus of great importance in regenerative medicine. Emerging evidence indicates that mitochondria are actively involved in the regulation of stem cell behaviors. Mitochondria undergo specific dynamics (biogenesis, fission, fusion, and mitophagy) during stem cell self-renewal, proliferation, and differentiation. The alteration of mitochondrial dynamics, fine-tuned by stem cell niche factors and stress signaling, has considerable impacts on stem cell behaviors. Here, we summarize the recent research progress on (1) how mitochondrial dynamics controls stem cell behaviors, (2) intrinsic and extrinsic factors that regulate mitochondrial dynamics, and (3) pharmacological regulators of mitochondrial dynamics and their therapeutic potential. This review emphasizes the metabolic control of stemness and differentiation and may shed light on potential new applications in stem cell-based therapy.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31089338 PMCID: PMC6476046 DOI: 10.1155/2019/9757201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1A simplified common scheme of mitochondrial dynamics in stem cells and differentiated cells. In most types of stem cells and reprogrammed iPSCs, mitochondria are usually localized in the nuclear periphery and characterized by sphere, fragmented, and punctate morphologies with fewer cristae (immature morphology). Correspondingly, mito-fission is high whereas mitochondrial biogenesis is low, which maintains low mitochondrial mass. Stem cells generally rely on glycolysis as the major energy source and have low levels of ATP, OXPHOS, and ROS levels. In differentiated cells, mitochondria change to more enlarged and elongated tubular morphology. Correspondingly, mito-fusion and biogenesis increase with the accumulation of mitochondria. Comparably, differentiated cells have higher ATP, ROS, and OXPHOS levels.
Figure 2Modulating mitochondrial dynamics impacts on stem cell behaviors. Blockades of mitochondrial dynamics, fission (blue), fusion (orange), mitophagy (red), and biogenesis (green), affect stem cell differentiation, self-renewal, apoptosis, differentiation, and reprogramming. Downregulation of mito-fission usually leads to impaired self-renewal and the loss of stemness in stem cells, while increasing differentiation. Stem cells are often protected from apoptosis. Fission blockade also decreases the reprogramming efficiency. Downregulation of mito-fusion impairs stem cell self-renewal and may have diverse effects on stem cell differentiation. In general, mito-fusion protects stem cells from apoptosis, and the mito-fusion blockade often results in increased vulnerability to stress. Downregulation of mito-fusion improves the reprogramming efficiency. The blockade of mitophagy also impairs stem cell self-renewal as well as decreases reprogramming efficiency. The function of mitophagy in stem cell differentiation has not been understood clearly enough and may be stem cell type-specific and lineage-specific. Mitochondrial biogenesis is generally pivotal for stem cell maintenance. Downregulation of biogenesis impairs stem cell self-renewal and differentiation. More detailed information on stem cell behaviors and their regulation by mitochondrial dynamics are listed in Table 1.
A summary of the effects on stem cell behaviors upon modulating key factors in mitochondrial dynamics.
| Dynamics | Key factors | Modulation | Effect on stem cell or iPSC behavior | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mito-fission | Drp1, Fis1 | Downregulation of Drp1 | Promote stem cell differentiation | [ |
| Lose stemness | [ | |||
| Decrease reprogramming efficiency to iPSCs | [ | |||
| Downregulation of Drp1/Fis1 | Block apoptosis | [ | ||
| Upregulation of Drp1 | Improve reprogramming efficiency to iPSCs | [ | ||
| Lose stemness | [ | |||
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| Mito-fission | OPA1, Mfn 1/2 | Downregulation of OPA1/Mfn1/2 | Impair stem cell differentiation | [ |
| Promote neuron stem cell differentiation | [ | |||
| Impair iPSC differentiation | [ | |||
| Impair self-renewal | [ | |||
| Improve reprogramming efficiency | [ | |||
| Upregulation of Mfn 2 | Promote stem cell differentiation | [ | ||
| Induce iPSC differentiation | [ | |||
| Protect cell from apoptosis | [ | |||
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| Mitophagy | Pink1, Parkin, Atg12, Atg3, Bnip3 | Downregulation of Atg12/Atg3/Fis1/Pink1/Parkin | Impair self-renewal | [ |
| Decrease reprogramming efficiency to iPSCs | [ | |||
| Downregulation of Atg12/Pink1 | Promote stem cell differentiation | [ | ||
| Downregulation of Atg3 | Display abnormal differentiation | [ | ||
| Downregulation of Pink1 | Impair neuron stem cell differentiation | [ | ||
| Downregulation of Pink1/Parkin/Bnip3 | Lose the function of protecting the cell from apoptosis | [ | ||
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| Mito-biogenesis | PGC1 | Inhibition of biogenesis | Inhibit differentiation | [ |
| Inhibition or activation of biogenesis | Lose stemness | [ | ||
| Inhibition of biogenesis | Cause cell death | [ | ||
| Activation of biogenesis | Promote stem cell differentiation | [ | ||
This table includes most key factors that are directly involved in mito-fission, mito-fusion, mitophagy, and mitochondrial biogenesis that are mentioned in this review. The effects of these key factors on stem cell behaviors are listed with the numbers of the references.
Figure 3Mitochondrial dynamics is regulated through multiple pathways. Oxidative stress and energy stress have distinct impacts on mito-fission (blue), mito-fusion (orange), mitophagy (pink), and mito-biogenesis (green) via distinct signaling pathways. The dash line denotes that the results from multiple studies are conflicting.
A summary of pharmacological tools for mito-fission, mito-fusion, and mitochondrial biogenesis modulation and their reported effects.
| Name | Function and mechanism | Physiological effect in nonstem cell | Physiological effect in stem cell |
|---|---|---|---|
| mDivi-1 | Fission inhibitor: inhibit assembly of Drp1 and its GTPase activity | Prevent cell death | Prevent stem cell death; promote hiPSC differentiation |
| P110 | Fission inhibitor: block Drp1/Fis1 interaction | Prevent stress- or injury-induced cell death | N/A |
| Dynasore | Fission inhibitor: noncompetitively inhibit the Drp1 GTPase activity | Protect cardiomyocyte from ischemia/reperfusion injury | N/A |
| M1 | Fusion activator | Reduce cytochrome | N/A |
| Leflunomide | Fusion activator: promote fusion by inhibition of pyrimidine synthesis | Protect cells from apoptosis | N/A |
| XCT790 | Biogenesis inhibitor: inhibit ERR | N/A | Induce cancer stem cell death; induce cell cycle arrest |
| Azithromycin or doxycycline | Biogenesis inhibitor: inhibit mitochondrial protein translation | N/A | Induce cancer stem cell death |
This table lists the reported effects of mito-fission inhibitors, mito-fusion activators, and mitochondrial biogenesis inhibitors in nonstem cells and stem cells. N/A denotes no study has been conducted.