| Literature DB >> 32466216 |
Serena Stanga1,2,3, Anna Caretto1,2, Marina Boido1,2,3, Alessandro Vercelli1,2,3.
Abstract
Mitochondria play a central role in a plethora of processes related to the maintenance of cellular homeostasis and genomic integrity. They contribute to preserving the optimal functioning of cells and protecting them from potential DNA damage which could result in mutations and disease. However, perturbations of the system due to senescence or environmental factors induce alterations of the physiological balance and lead to the impairment of mitochondrial functions. After the description of the crucial roles of mitochondria for cell survival and activity, the core of this review focuses on the "mitochondrial switch" which occurs at the onset of neuronal degeneration. We dissect the pathways related to mitochondrial dysfunctions which are shared among the most frequent or disabling neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Huntington's, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, and Spinal Muscular Atrophy. Can mitochondrial dysfunctions (affecting their morphology and activities) represent the early event eliciting the shift towards pathological neurobiological processes? Can mitochondria represent a common target against neurodegeneration? We also review here the drugs that target mitochondria in neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Keywords: cellular homeostasis; mitochondria; mitochondria biogenesis and dynamics; mitochondria targeting drugs; motor neuron diseases; neurodegeneration; neurodegenerative diseases; oxidative stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32466216 PMCID: PMC7279270 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21103719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The mitochondrial switch. The sketch shows the appearance and the features of a mitochondrion before and after the accumulation of damage responsible for its impairment. At the onset of the neurodegenerative process the increase of reactive oxygen species (ROS), mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations and altered proteins determines the swelling of mitochondria and the disruption of their membranes and cristae. Such an altered morphology heavily impacts on function determining, among others, decreases ATP production, increased ROS, leading to neuronal death. Created with BioRender software.
Figure 2The process of neurodegeneration in the central nervous system (CNS), in the periphery and across diseases. Neurodegeneration is a progressive process taking place not only in the CNS but also in the periphery. After the accumulation of damage at the cellular and, in particular, mitochondrial level, the switch from physiology to pathology is fast and rarely reversible and it is occurring in many cell types. Indeed, it occurs in the CNS but also in the periphery, in particular the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), the skeletal muscles, blood cells, and fibroblasts. Moreover, the major pathways involved are linked to ROS and free radical formation, alterations in ATP formation, calcium homeostasis, apoptosis, mitochondrial turnover and dynamics, and neuroinflammation in terms of microglia and astrocytes activation. These pathways are affected in all the neurodegenerative diseases discussed in this review. Increase of ROS is represented by the black arrow pointing up and reduction in energy production by the black arrow pointing down. Created with BioRender software.
Available treatments for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), Parkinson’s disease (PD), Huntington’s disease (HD), Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), and Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA). The table summarizes the most common therapies for these neurodegenerative pathologies. Unfortunately, the majority of these treatments are only symptomatic or palliative and cannot stop the disease progression (especially for AD, PD, HD, and ALS) or are less effective in milder and late treated patients (as in the case of SMA).
| Pathology | Drug | Mechanism of Action | Main Effects | Main Limitations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Donepezil, Galantamine, and Rivastigmine | Cholinesterase inhibitors | Acetylcholine increase at synaptic level | Low CNS selectivity; high doses cause gastrointestinal toxicity | [ |
| Memantine | Noncompetitive NMDA antagonist | Reduction of neuronal dysfunctions due to glutamate downregulation | Low beneficial effects in clinical trials (maybe due to late administration) | ||
|
| Levodopa + Carbidopa/Levodopa + Benserazide | DA precursor + DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor | SNC DA level increase | Ineffective in mitigating some motor and non-motor symptoms; dyskinesia | [ |
| Levodopa + Carbidopa + Entacapone | DA precursor + DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor + COMT inhibitor | SNC DA level increase | Motor fluctuations; dyskinesia | ||
| Pramipexole and Apomorphine | DA agonists | Activation of DA receptors | Less effective than Levodopa; dyskinesia; expensive | ||
| Selegiline, Rasagiline, and Safinamide | MAO-B inhibitors | Prevention of DA metabolism | Mild efficacy in monotherapy | ||
| Amantadine | Antiviral drug | Bradykinesia, tremor and rigidity mitigation, and Levodopa-induced dyskinesia reduction | Several side effects such as hallucination, confusion, blurred vision, and edema | ||
| Trihexyphenidyl | Anticholinergic | Tremor reduction | Mild effects on motor symptoms | ||
|
| Tetrabenazine (XENAZINETM) and Deutetrabenazine (AUSTEDOTM) | Vesicular monoamine transporter (VMAT) type 2 inhibitor | Treatment of pathology- associated chorea (synaptic DA reduction) | Only symptomatic treatment | [ |
|
| Riluzole | Glutamatergic transmission blocker | Antiexcitotoxic effects | Effectiveness limited to the first six months of therapy | [ |
| Edaravone (RADICAVATM) | Antioxidant | Free radical scavenger (neuroprotection) | Prescription only for limited cohort of patients | ||
|
| Nusinersen (SPINRAZATM) | ASO acting on | Increase of full-length SMN production | Limited efficacy in milder or late-treated patients; expensive; repetitive intrathecal injections | [ |
| Onasemnogene Abeparvovec (ZOLGENSMATM) | Smn1 delivering by the adeno-associated virus AAV9 (only FDA approved, not yet in therapy) | Increase of full-length SMN production | Limited efficacy in milder or late-treated patients; expensive |
AAV = adeno-associated virus; ASO = antisense oligonucleotide; COMT = catechol-O-methyltransferase; DA = dopamine; FDA = Food and Drug Administration; MAO = monoamine oxidase; NMDA = N-methyl-D-aspartate; VMAT = vesicular monoamine transporter.
Antioxidant compounds for neurodegenerative disease treatment. The table lists synthetic and natural antioxidant compounds tested for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases both in preclinical and clinical studies. The most recent and promising studies are collected here. For clinical trial ID we referred to https://clinicaltrials.gov.
| Therapeutic Function | Drug / Molecule | Pathology | Preclinical Studies / PMCID | Preclinical Results | Clinical Trials / Trial ID | Clinical Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| α-Lipoic acid | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6914903 [ | In vitro studies: mitigation of cytotoxic effects (reduction of ROS production and lipid peroxidation). | Clinical trials information is collected here PMC6914903 [ | Safety and neuroprotection are confirmed in combination with other antioxidants conventional treatments but further studies on interactions between them are needed. Isolated α-lipoic acid activity has to be tested |
| In vivo studies: memory and learning improvement | ||||||
| Inosine | ALS | Under evaluation | Clinical trial Phase 1 Completed, PMC6292193 [ | Safety, tolerability, and efficacy in increasing urate serum levels | ||
| Inosine/Urate | PD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC5233635 [ | In vitro: neuroprotection (Nrf2 transcription and nuclear translocation; GSH increasing) | Clinical trial Phase 2 Completed, PMC3940333 [ | Safety, tolerability, and effectiveness in increasing urate serum levels | |
| In vivo: behavioral improvement; reduction of dopaminergic neurons loss | ||||||
| Melatonin | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6826722 [ | In vitro: protection from apoptosis and neuroinflammation. | Meta-analysis of controlled trials information is collected in the following work PMC6826722 [ | Improvement in sleep quality but no ameliorations in cognitive functions when melatonin is administered not in combinations with other AD treatments | |
| In vivo: improvement in cognitive functions and behavioral activities (reduction of neuronal death and beneficial effects on synapses), protection against neuroinflammation | ||||||
| Melatonin | ALS | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC7016185 [ | In vitro: apoptosis inhibition | Clinical safety trial information is collected in the following work PMID: 22739839 [ | Safety, improvement of sleep quality, and reduction of oxidative stress biomarkers. Further studies to confirm its efficacy alone or combined to other drugs different from Riluzole are needed | |
| In vivo: survival extension and delay in disease progression (oxidative damage reduction and protection against neuroinflammation) | ||||||
| Melatonin | PD | Preclinical in vivo PMC6646522 [ | Reduction of locomotor deficit (downregulation of lipid peroxidation and dopaminergic cells loss) and of neuroinflammation | Clinical trials information is collected in the following work PMC6646522 [ | Improvement in sleep quality but no benefits on motor activity | |
| Methylene Blue | PD | Preclinical in vivo PMID: 30219247 [ | Attentional functions and motor improvement and neuroprotection | |||
| Mito-Apo | AD | Preclinical in vitro PMC5392427 [ | Mito-Apo on dopaminergic neuronal cell line, mouse primary cortical neurons, and a human mesencephalic cell line: reduction of neuronal degeneration and of neuroinflammation | |||
| Mito-Apo | PD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC4995106 [ | In vitro: neuroprotection against oxidative stress | |||
| In vivo: motor deficit and neuroinflammation attenuation (neuroprotection) | ||||||
| MitoQ | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6716473 [ | In vitro: neuroprotection against oxidative stress and neurites outgrowth | |||
| In vivo: mitigation of cognitive decline and elongation of lifespan | ||||||
| MitoQ | ALS | Preclinical in vivo PMID: 24582549 [ | MitoQ increases hindlimb strength and promotes lifespan elongation of SOD1G93A mice | |||
| MitoQ | HD | Preclinical in vivo PMC6970224 [ | MitoQ on R6/2 HD mouse model: reduction of ROS-induced autophagy | |||
| MitoQ | PD | Preclinical in vivo PMID: 29842922 [ | MitoQ prevents dopaminergic neurons loss in a 6-OHDA PD mouse model promoting mitochondrial fusion | |||
| N-Acetylcysteine | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6320789 [ | In vitro: apoptosis inhibition and protection against neuroinflammation | Clinical Trial Phase 2 Completed PMID: 25589719 [ | Cognitive and behavioral improvement | |
| In vivo: increase of brain connections, GSH levels, TH and Complex 1 activity and protection against neuroinflammation | ||||||
| N-Acetylcysteine | HD | Preclinical in vivo PMC3967529 [ | Cognitive and motor deficits improvement | |||
| N-Acetylcysteine | PD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo, PMC6320789 [ | In vitro: apoptosis inhibition | Clinical trials information is collected in the following work PMC6320789 [ | Increase of GSH brain levels | |
| In vivo: increase of GSH levels and reduction of lipid peroxidation | ||||||
| N-Acetylcysteine | SMA | Preclinical in vitro PMC4728333 [ | NAC on iPSCs: mitigation of motor neuron degeneration (increasing in mitochondrial number and axonal transport, reduction of axonal swelling, and apoptosis inhibition) | |||
| SkQ1 | AD | Preclinical in vivo PMC6716473 [ | Cognitive and behavioral improvement (reduction of ROS formation, improvement of mitochondrial biogenesis and bioenergetics and mitochondrial structure protection) | |||
| Szeto-Schiller tetrapeptides | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6716473 [ | In vitro: mitochondrial biogenesis, bioenergetics and dynamics improvement, and apoptosis inhibition | |||
| In vivo: anterograde axonal transport and synaptic activity enhancement | ||||||
| Szeto-Schiller tetrapeptides | ALS | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC4267688 [ | In vitro: mutant cells apoptosis inhibition | |||
| In vivo: increase of survival and behavioral improvement in SOD1G93A mice (neuroprotection) | ||||||
| Szeto-Schiller tetrapeptides | PD | Preclinical in vivo PMC4267688 [ | Lifespan extension and motor performances improvement (neuroprotection) | |||
|
| Carotenoids (Astaxanthin) | AD | Preclinical in vitro PMC4791503 [ | Astaxanthin on Aβ1-42 oligomers-treated hippocampal neurons: protection against ROS production reducing synaptotoxic events and neuroinflammation | ||
| Vitamin C | AD | Preclinical in vitro, PMID: 12592670 [ | In vitro: inhibition of apoptosis due to mitochondrial membrane depolarization and DNA fragmentation | |||
| In vivo: Preservation of mitochondrial morphology (attenuation of oxidative stress damage) and apoptosis inhibition | ||||||
| Vitamin E | AD | Preclinical in vitro, PMC4333972 [ | Vit.E on astrocytes treated with glutamate: mitochondrial injuries recovering (MMP stabilization and lipid peroxidation reduction) | Epidemiological studies information is collected in the following work PMC6645610 [ | Results insufficient. Additional studies on AD patients are needed | |
| Vit.E in aged mice: increase of TFAM, MMP, and ATP levels | ||||||
| Vit.E on APP/PS1 mice: cognitive and behavioral performances improvement (Aß accumulation prevention, oxidative stress reduction) | ||||||
| Vitamin E | ALS | Preclinical in vivo PMID: 8967745 [ | Vit.E determines ALS delay onset and slows its progression | Clinical trials information is collected in the following work PMC7016185 [ | Several clinical studies have shown conflicting outcomes in slowing ALS onset and progression, but further studies are needed |
Mito-Apo = Mito-Apocynin; NAC = N-Acetylcysteine; OHDA = hydroxydopamine; SS = Szeto-Schiller; TH = Thyrosine hydroxylase; Vit. = Vitamin.
Compounds acting on mitochondrial biogenesis and permeability. The table shows the promising experimental results obtained in vitro and/or in vivo after the administration of PGC-1α (to enhance mitochondria biogenesis) and Olesoxime (to regulate mitochondria permeability). The latter one already gave promising results in SMA patients. For clinical trial ID we referred to https://clinicaltrials.gov.
| Therapeutic Function | Drug / Molecule | Pathology | Preclinical Studies / PMCID | Preclinical Results | Clinical Trials / Trial ID | Clinical Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| PGC-1α | PD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC4293280 [ | PGC-1α restoration in a cell culture model for α-synuclein oligomerization | ||
| In A30P α-syn transgenic animals: α-synuclein oligomerization reduction | ||||||
|
| Olesoxime | HD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMID: 31283931 [ | Mitochondrial membrane stabilization; cognitive and behavioral improvement | ||
| Olesoxime | PD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMID: 31283931 [ | Mitochondrial activity enhancement and apoptosis inhibition | |||
| Olesoxime | SMA | Preclinical in vivo PMC4033913 [ | Lifespan elongation | Clinical trial Phase 2 Completed PMID: 31283931 [ | Efficacy in motor improvement and safety have been confirmed | |
| It could be administered in combinatorial therapy |
Compounds acting on mitochondrial bioenergetics. The table lists compounds involved in mitochondrial bioenergetics enhancement, providing an overview of preclinical and clinical studies. For clinical trial ID we referred to https://clinicaltrials.gov.
| Therapeutic Function | Drug / Molecule | Pathology | Preclinical Studies / PMCID | Preclinical Results | Clinical Trials / Trial ID | Clinical Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| NAD | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6716473 [ | Mitochondrial bioenergetics and dynamics enhancement and mitophagy stimulation; cognitive functions improvement | Clinical trial information is collected in the following work PMID:15134388 [ | Lower cognitive impairment than patients treated with placebo |
| Nicotinamide Riboside | AD | Preclinical in vivo PMC7016185 [ | Learning and memory improvement (synaptic plasticity amelioration, neurogenesis enhancement, and apoptosis reduction) | |||
| Nicotinamide Riboside | ALS | Preclinical in vitro PMC4865928 [ | Protection against oxidative stress | |||
| Nicotinamide Riboside | PD | Preclinical in vitro PMID: 29874584 [ | Mitochondrial biogenesis and bioenergetics enhancement; MMP reduction; downregulation of ROS formation | |||
| Triheptanoin | ALS | Preclinical in vivo PMC5001695 [ | Motor symptoms onset delay in SOD1G93A mice thanks to mitigation of motor neuron loss | |||
| Triheptanoin | HD | Not found | Clinical trial Phase 2 completed PMC4336068 [ | Brain metabolic profile enhancement |
NAD = nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide.
Compounds targeting simultaneously different mitochondrial dysfunctions. The table lists the molecules that have been tested in preclinical studies or in clinical trials and that regulate several mitochondrial processes impaired in neurodegenerative diseases. For clinical trial ID we referred to https://clinicaltrials.gov.
| Therapeutic Function | Drug / Molecule | Pathology | Preclinical Studies / PMCID | Preclinical Results | Clinical Trials / Trial ID | Clinical Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 3-N-butylphthalide | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMID: 30103000 [ | In vitro: neuroprotection (apoptosis reduction and neuronal proliferation) | ||
| In vivo: cognitive impairment amelioration (synaptic protection, apoptosis inhibition, and antioxidant activity) | ||||||
| 3-N-butylphthalide | ALS | Preclinical in vivo PMID: 30103000 [ | Lifetime extension and motor performances improvement (motor neuron loss reduction) | |||
| 3-N-butylphthalide | PD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMID: 30103000 [ | Neuroprotection (oxidative stress mitigation, MMP stabilization, and mPTP opening prevention) | Randomized controlled trial information is collected in the following work PMC6447885 [ | Motor and sleep quality improvement | |
|
| Curcumin | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6716473 [ | Oxidative stress reduction, mitochondrial biogenesis and bioenergetics enhancement, and MMP stabilization | ||
| Curcumin | ALS | Preclinical in vitro PMC7016185 [ | Cytotoxicity reduction (antioxidant activity) | Clinical trials information is collected in the following work PMC7016185 [ | Lifespan prolongation and delaying diseases progression but further studies on different delivery methods are needed | |
|
| Epigallocatechin-Gallate | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6716473 [ | In vitro: antioxidant activity and MMP restoration | ||
| In vivo: improvement of cognitive functions in rats injected with streptozotocin | ||||||
|
| Epigallocatechin- Gallate | ALS | Preclinical in vitr, and in vivo PMC7016185 [ | In vitro: oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation reduction; apoptosis inhibition | ||
| In vivo: motor performances enhancement (increase of survival signal and reduction of death signal) | ||||||
|
| Flavonoids | ALS | Preclinical in vitro in vivo PMC7016185 [ | In vitro: antioxidant activity | ||
| In vivo: motor performances improvement (prevention of MN loss) | ||||||
|
| N-Methyl,N-propynyl-2-phenylethylamine | PD | Preclinical studies in vivo PMID: 26563498 [ | MPPE in MPTP-treated mice: neuroprotection (increase of Complex I activity and UCP-2 expression and antiapoptotic activity) and motor function enhancement | ||
|
| Quercetin | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC6716473 [ | In vitro: oxidative stress reduction and apoptosis inhibition | ||
| In vivo: cognitive functions improvement; antioxidant activity, MMP and mitochondrial morphology restoration, ROS reduction, ATP levels increase, and apoptosis inhibition | ||||||
|
| R(+) and S(-) Pramipexole | PD | Preclinical studies in vitro and in vivo PMID: 9648878 [ | Neuroprotection (reduction of ROS generation and mPTP opening prevention) | ||
|
| Resveratrol | AD | Preclinical in vitro, and in vivo PMC6716473 [ | In vitro: antioxidant activity, MMP restoration, apoptosis inhibition and mitophagy stimulation | Clinical trial phase Completed PMC5234138 [ | Cognitive decline mitigation |
| In vivo: memory loss prevention | ||||||
|
| Resveratrol with Glucose and Malate | AD | Not found | Clinical trial phase 3Completed PMC6240843 [ | Safety and tolerability of low doses are confirmed | |
|
| Resveratrol | ALS | Preclinical in vivo PMC3996124 [ | Resveratrol in SOD1G93A ALS mice: delay in pathology onset and progression and lower and upper MNs preservation; increase of mitochondria biogenesis and regulation of autophagic flux | ||
|
| Tauroursodeoxycholic acid | ALS | Preclinical in vitro PMID: 24848512 [ | Glycine-conjugated UDCA exerts an antiapoptotic activity on NSC34 cells carrying G93A mutation | Clinical trial Phase 2 Completed PMC5024041 [ | Safety and disease progression decline |
| Ursodeoxycholic acid | ALS | Preclinical in vitro PMID: 24848512 [ | Already described for TUDCA | Randomized, non-controlled trial, PMC6817734 [ | Safety and tolerability are confirmed | |
| Ursodeoxycholic acid | ALS | Preclinical in vitro PMID: 24848512 [ | Already described for TUDCA | Clinical trial Phase 3, PMC6817734 [ | ALS progression decline | |
| Ursodeoxycholic acid | AD | Preclinical studies in vitro PMC6193139 [ | UDCA on fibroblasts from AD patients: MMP restoration involving Drp1 | |||
| Tauroursodeoxycholic acid | HD | Preclinical in vivo PMC125009 [ | Motor and sensory improvement on R6/2 mice (neuroprotection) | |||
| Ursodeoxycholic acid | PD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMID: 30219247 [ | Apoptosis inhibition; motor performances enhancement (low striatal dopamine decline) | |||
|
| Wogonin | AD | Preclinical in vitro and in vivo PMC5478820 [ | Wogonin on Tet-On A | ||
| Wogonin on 3xTg mice: cognitive functions improvement (neuroprotective and neurotrophic activity) |
EGCG = Epigallocatechin-Gallate; MPPE = N-Methyl,N-propynyl-2-phenylethylamine; NBP = 3-N-butylphthalide; Tg = transgenic; UDCA = ursodeoxycholic acid.