| Literature DB >> 32292356 |
Flavia Messina1, Francesco Cecconi1,2,3, Carlo Rodolfo1.
Abstract
Dementia is one among the consequences of aging, and amnesia is often one of the most common symptoms. The lack of memory, as a consequence of both "healthy" aging or neurodegenerative conditions, such as in Alzheimer's disease, has a dramatic impact on the patient's lifestyle. In fact, the inability to recall information made by a previous experience could not only alter the interaction with the environment, but also lead to a loss of identity. Mitochondria are key regulators of brain's activity; thanks to their "dynamic organelles" nature they constantly rearrange in the cell body and move along axons and dendrites, changing in dimension, shape, and location, accordingly to the cell's energy requirements. Indeed, the energy they can provide is essential to maintain synaptic plasticity and to ensure transmission through presynaptic terminals and postsynaptic spines. Stressful conditions, like the ones found in neurodegenerative diseases, seriously impair mitochondria bioenergetic, leading to both loss of proper neuronal interaction and of neuron themselves. Here, we highlighted the current knowledge about the role of mitochondria and mitochondrial dynamics in relation to neurodegenerative disorders linked to aging. Furthermore, we discuss the obstacles as well as the future perspectives aimed to enlarge our knowledge about mitochondria as target for new therapeutic strategies to slow down aging and neurodegenerative disease's symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: aging; mitochondria; mitophagy and mitochondrial dynamics; neurodegenerative diseases; reactive oxygen species
Year: 2020 PMID: 32292356 PMCID: PMC7119339 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00271
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
FIGURE 1Reactive oxygen species promote health and lifespan. (A) Multiple mitochondria converging stresses results in an increased production of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mtROS), which are able to activate a transcriptional retrograde response, between the organelle and the nucleus, linking mtROS to nuclear events. The result of this pathway is an increased cell stress resistance that can extend health and lifespan. (B) This effect relies on a mitochondrial process called mitohormesis, in which mtROS engages a non-linear response (green), instead of the linear response (red) postulated by the classical free radical theory of aging. The mitohormetic response (green) is characterized by health span-promoting effects at low mtROS doses, while cellular and systemic damage are the consequence of higher mtROS doses.
FIGURE 2Mitochondrial dynamics depends on the balance of Fission and Fusion processes. Mitochondrial fission is initiated through the interaction of mitochondria with the Endoplasmic Reticulum and the actin cytoskeleton. The activation of the Dynamin related protein-1 (Drp1) allows its translocation to the mitochondrial outer membrane, where with the help of the mitochondrial fission factor (Mff) and the mitochondrial dynamics proteins (MiDs), constrains the organelle until it divides into two separate ones. Mitochondrial fusion is dependent on the action of Mitufusin-1 and -2, on the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM), and of OPA1, on the inner mitochondrial membrane. Fission is not only a physiological event, i.e., allowing the organelles to be transported along axons or correctly segregated in daughter cells during mitosis, but could also be a consequence of mitochondrial damage, such as the loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), thus allowing the removal of damaged organelles through the mitophagy process. Parkin-dependent mitophagy requires the PINK1-dependent recruitment of the cytosolic Parkin on the OMM, where it could ubiquitinate mitochondrial resident protein, such as VDAC1. This protein signal is later recognized by the adaptor protein p62 which, through the interaction with LC3 on the membrane of the on-forming autophagosome, delivers the targeted mitochondria to the degradation. In the Parkin-independent mitophagy, the damaged organelle is recognized by LC3 through the interaction with other protein receptors, such as BNIP3L, FUNDC1, Optineurin, localized on the outer mitochondrial membrane.