| Literature DB >> 32257551 |
Yibo Yang1, Tianyi Li1, Zhibo Li1, Ning Liu1, Youyou Yan1, Bin Liu1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of mortality worldwide, and mitochondrial dysfunction is the primary contributor to these disorders. Recent studies have elaborated on selective autophagy-mitophagy, which eliminates damaged and dysfunctional mitochondria, stabilizes mitochondrial structure and function, and maintains cell survival and growth. Numerous recent studies have reported that mitophagy plays an important role in the pathogenesis of various cardiovascular diseases. This review summarizes the mechanisms underlying mitophagy and advancements in studies on the role of mitophagy in cardiovascular disease. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: cardiomyocyte; cardiovascular disease; mitochondria; mitophagy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32257551 PMCID: PMC7069452 DOI: 10.14336/AD.2019.0518
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Dis ISSN: 2152-5250 Impact factor: 6.745
Figure 1.The mechanisms underlying mitophagy. (A) An overview of the mechanisms underlying mitophagy. (B) Step1: Phagophores are formed by the isolated membrane and LC3. Step2: Thereafter, through LC3 adaptors and LC3 receptors, damaged mitochondria can be recognized and form mitophagosomes. The detailed mechanism can be divided into six stages. a. CHDH accumulates on the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM) and interacts with p62 and binds with LC3. b. PINK1 accumulates on the OMM, phosphorylates Parkin and Mfn2, thus recruiting Parkin to the OMM, and Parkin helps generate ubiquitin chains on the OMM, which can recognize p62 and bind with LC3. c. PINK1 phosphorylates ubiquitin on the OMM and LC3 adapters can bind with it. d. LC3 directly recognizes BNIP3 or Nix through LIR, and phosphorylation of LIR in BNIP3 promotes the interaction between BNIP3 and LC3. e. Dephosphorylation of FUNDC1 restores its ability to interact with LC3 through LIR. f. AMBRA1, Bcl2L13, and cardiophospholipids directly recognize LC3 through LIR. Step3: Mitophagosomes and lysosomes fuse into mitolysosomes.
Therapeutic application of mitophagy.
| Diseases | Representatives | Mechanisms | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MicroRNAs | ||||
| I/R | MiR-410 | Mitophagy- | damage | [ |
| I/R | MiR-137 | BNIP3/FUNDC1- | - | [ |
| Cardiac Lipotoxicity, DCM | MiR-133a | Nix- | protection | [ |
|
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| Clinical drugs and chemical reagents | ||||
|
| ||||
| I/R | Melatonin | PINK1/Parkin- | protection | [ |
| DCM | Melatonin | PINK1/Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| AS | Melatonin | PINK1/Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| I/R | Simvastatin | Parkin/P62+ | protection | [ |
| I/R | Liraglutide | Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| I/R | Zine | PINK1+ | protection | [ |
| I/R | Sevoflurane postconditioning | Parkin- | protection | [ |
| I/R | TEMPOL preconditioning | PINK1/Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| HF | Curcumin | BNIP3- | protection | [ |
| Cardiotoxicity | Ellagic acid | BNIP3- | protection | [ |
| Stroke | Tunicamycin and thapsigargin | Mitophagy+ | protection | [ |
| Stroke | Peroxynitrite | PINK1/Parkin+ | damage | [ |
| Stroke | Naringin | Parkin- | protection | [ |
|
| ||||
| Signal pathways | ||||
|
| ||||
| AS | NR4A1/CaMKII activation | Parkin+ | damage | [ |
| Stroke | MAPK-ERK-CREB blockade | Mfn2- | damage | [ |
| I/R | Rab5 endosomal pathway activation | Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| I/R | P53/TIGAR activation | BNIP3- | damage | [ |
| HF | JNK/FOXO3a activation | BNIP3+ | damage | [ |
|
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| Activators/inhibitors, genes knock in/out | ||||
|
| ||||
| I/R | STAT1 activation | Mitophagy- | damage | [ |
| AS | PINK1/Parkin knockout | PINK1/Parkin- | damage | [ |
| I/R | GPER activation | PINK1/Parkin- | protection | [ |
| I/R | ALDH2 activation | PINK1/Parkin- | protection | [ |
| DCM | Sirt3 overexpression | Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| DCM | Mst1 knockout | Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| HF | BAG3 knockdown | Parkin- | damage | [ |
| AS | F13A | PINK1/Parkin- | protection | [ |
| HF | CsA | PINK1/Parkin- | protection | [ |
| HF | Akt2 knockout | BNIP3/PINK1/Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| Stroke | Nix knockout | Nix- | damage | [ |
| I/R | DUSP1 activation | BNIP3- | protection | [ |
| HF | SWI/SNF deletion | BNIP3+ | damage | [ |
| I/R | FUNDC1 knockout | FUNDC1- | damage | [ |
|
| ||||
| Environmental stimuli | ||||
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| I/R | Mild hypothermia | Parkin- | protection | [ |
| I/R | Hypoxic preconditioning | FUNDC1+ | protection | [ |
| Myocardial inflammatory | Acute exercise | BNIP3+ | protection | [ |
| I/R | Exercise preconditioning | Parkin+ | protection | [ |
| Stroke | Acidic postconditioning | Mitophagy+ | protection | [ |
| Stroke | Remote ischemic post conditioning | Parkin+ | protection | [ |
Figure 2.The graphical abstract. Mitophagy plays an important role in cardiovascular disease, and the degree of mitophagy can be detected via TEM, western blotting, fluorescence labeling, and mitochondrial mass determination, and the related molecular mechanism depends on PINK1/Parkin, CHDH, Nix/BNIP3, FUNDC1, etc. Mitophagy is related with certain physiological and pathological phenomena including stress, cellular defense, maintenance of cellular homeostasis, regulation of cell growth and development, and aging; these phenomena are also involved in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases including ischemic heart disease, diabetic cardiomyopathy, heart failure, hypertension, atherosclerosis, arrhythmia, and stroke, and these diseases are closely associated with mitophagy. Therefore, certain factors including microRNAs, clinical drugs and chemical reagents, signaling pathways, activators/inhibitors and gene knock in/out, and environmental stimuli can regulate the level of mitophagy to alter the progression of these diseases.