| Literature DB >> 32475349 |
Luodan Yang1, Hannah Youngblood2, Chongyun Wu1, Quanguang Zhang3.
Abstract
Mitochondrial dysfunction plays a central role in the formation of neuroinflammation and oxidative stress, which are important factors contributing to the development of brain disease. Ample evidence suggests mitochondria are a promising target for neuroprotection. Recently, methods targeting mitochondria have been considered as potential approaches for treatment of brain disease through the inhibition of inflammation and oxidative injury. This review will discuss two widely studied approaches for the improvement of brain mitochondrial respiration, methylene blue (MB) and photobiomodulation (PBM). MB is a widely studied drug with potential beneficial effects in animal models of brain disease, as well as limited human studies. Similarly, PBM is a non-invasive treatment that promotes energy production and reduces both oxidative stress and inflammation, and has garnered increasing attention in recent years. MB and PBM have similar beneficial effects on mitochondrial function, oxidative damage, inflammation, and subsequent behavioral symptoms. However, the mechanisms underlying the energy enhancing, antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory effects of MB and PBM differ. This review will focus on mitochondrial dysfunction in several different brain diseases and the pathological improvements following MB and PBM treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Methylene blue; Mitochondrial dysfunction; Neuroprotection; Photobiomodulation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32475349 PMCID: PMC7262767 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-020-00197-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Fig. 1Diagram of electron leakage in brain disease. Electrons in the mitochondrial ETC are transferred along a series of four protein complexes (Complexes I-IV) with the aid of electron transporters NADH, FADH2, ubiquinone (Co-enzyme Q10, CoQ), and cytochrome c (Cyt c). As a result of this electron transfer, protons are pumped by Complexes I, III, and IV from the mitochondrial matrix into the intermembrane space, thereby generating an electrochemical gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane. This gradient is used to propel ATP synthase (Complex V) to produce ATP. Although this process is highly efficient, electrons can escape from Complex I and Complex III and be transferred to O2, which is reduced to the radical O2•−. This ROS production is exacerbated under pathological conditions such as brain disease and activates inflammatory processes, thereby establishing a cycle of ROS production, inflammation, and neuronal damage
Summary of mitochondria-related changes in brain disease
| Condition of interest | Observed mitochondria-related changes in brain disease |
|---|---|
| • Increased ROS production [ | |
| • Impaired balance of mitochondrial fission and fusion [ | |
| • Aberrant mitochondrial enzymes [ | |
| • Increased mtDNA mutation [ | |
| • Abnormal function of mitochondrial import channels [ | |
| • Inflammation [ | |
| • Accumulation of APP/Aβ in mitochondrial import channels [ | |
| • Mitochondrial dysfunction-induced apoptosis [ | |
| • Impaired Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (mitochondrial Ca2+ overload) [ | |
| • Impaired mitochondrial trafficking [ | |
| • Mitophagy defects [ | |
| • Decreased mitochondrial membrane potential [ | |
| • Mitochondrial Ca2+ overload [ | |
| • Reduced oxidase complex activity [ | |
| • Imbalance of mitochondrial fusion and fission induced mitochondrial respiration dysfunction, increased ROS production, and release of apoptosis- related factors [ | |
| • Impaired mitopahgy [ | |
| • Failure of membrane ion pump, cellular potassium efflux, sodium influx, and the depolarization of the membrane [ | |
| • The dysregulation of mitochondrial Ca2+ homeostasis [ | |
| • Cytochrome c release induced apoptosis [ | |
| • Excessive mitochondrial superoxide production [ | |
| • Mitochondrial dynamics defects [ | |
| • Abnormal mitophagy [ | |
| • Inhibition of mitochondrial OXPHOS activity [ | |
| • Decreased content of mitochondrial enzymes [ | |
| • Inhibition of complexes in the mitochondrial respiratory chain and the activity of Na+, K + -ATPase [ | |
| • Increased mtDNA mutation [ | |
| • Impaired mitochondrial ETC [ | |
| • Mitochondrial respiration defects [ | |
| • Genetic mutation induced mitochondrial dysfunction [ | |
| • Excessive ROS production [ | |
| • Mitochondrial dynamics defects [ | |
| • Mitochondrial Ca2+ overload in DA neurons [ | |
| • Inappropriate trafficking of damaged mitochondria [ | |
| • Compromised mitophagy [ |
Fig. 2Primary Mechanisms Underlying Mitochondria Protection through MB. MB reroutes the pathway of electron transfer by working as an alternative electron transporter. By bypassing the ETC between Complex I and Complex III, MB efficiently attenuates electron leakage and subsequent ROS generation
Fig. 3Primary Mechanisms Underlying Mitochondria Protection through PBM. PBM treatment causes NO to dissociate from Complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase, CCO), causing the complex’s activity to increase. This allows the flux of electrons, the pumping of protons, and the synthesis of ATP to increase, thereby boosting cellular energy levels. In addition, when PBM stimulates Complex IV activity in normal cells, mitochondrial membrane potential is increased above normal baseline levels, resulting in a brief and rather modest increase in ROS production. The short burst of ROS is able to activate cytoprotective signaling, which attenuate ROS induced oxidative damage and neuroinflammation
Summary of effects of MB or PBM on neurodegenerative disorders and brain injury
| Disease | Effect of a treatment with MB | Effect of a treatment with PBM |
|---|---|---|
| • Increases functional MRI activity and improves memory retrieval [ | • Reduces hyperphosphorylated tau, neurofibrillary tangles, and oxidative stress [ | |
| • Decreases Aβ levels and Aβ-ABAD binding [ | • Increases the ability of Aβ phagocytosis [ | |
| • Attenuates the activity and expression of β-secretase, inhibits the formation of neurotoxic oligomeric Aβ, and improves behavioral results [ | • Improves spatial learning and memory by significantly reducing Aβ burden [ | |
| • Exerts neuroprotection by activating the | ||
| • Inhibits p-tau aggregation and tau-tau interactions [ | ERK/CREB pathway and upregulating the expression of BDNF [ | |
| • Reduces excessive ROS production [ | ||
| • Upregulates Complex IV activates, heme synthesis and mitochondrial function [ | • Restores mitochondrial dynamics [ | |
| • Decreases edema and lesion volume and improves behavioral scores [ | • Neurological improvement [ | |
| • Increases autophagy [ | • Increases mitochondrial function, improves blood flow, and reduces swelling [ | |
| • Inhibits excessive ROS production and attenuates mitochondrial dysfunction, cytochrome c release, and neuronal apoptosis [ | ||
| • Decreases oxidative stress, inhibits inflammation, and attenuates apoptosis [ | ||
| • Improves behavioral results after focal cerebral ischemia [ | • Improves neurological rating scores [ | |
| • Decreases lesion volume, cerebral edema, and gray and white- matter damage [ | • Stimulates neurogenesis and improves mitochondrial function [ | |
| • Increases cerebral global glucose uptake and blood flow [ | • Preserves mitochondrial integrity [ | |
| • Increases mitochondrial function [ | • Attenuates mitochondrial fragmentation and restores mitochondrial dynamics [ | |
| • Preserves mitochondrial structure and function [ | ||
| • Increases mitophagy and preserves mitochondrial membrane potential [ | • Decreases protein carbonylation, DNA oxidative damage, and lipid peroxidation [ | |
| • Improves the symptoms of patients with severe depression [ | • Improves depressive symptoms [ | |
| • Selectively inhibits nitric oxide synthase (NOS) [ | • Improves ATP production and increases activity and expression of mitochondrial Complex IV [ | |
| • Attenuates dopamine loss and reduces the disruption of mitochondrial function and excessive production of ROS [ | • Reduces cell loss and inhibits inflammatory amoeboid microglia [ | |
| • Improves Complexes I, II, and III activities, reduces free radical production, and improves behavioral results [ | • Improves speech, cognition, gait, and freezing episodes in PD patients [ | |
| • Upregulates brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression [ | • Improves mitochondrial function and reduces oxidative stress [ |
Fig. 4Mitochondrial related changes associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative damage, dysregulated neuronal Ca2+, and neuroinflammation are hallmarks of brain aging (the other six hallmarks are deregulated energy metabolism, stem cell exhaustion, impaired molecular waste disposal, impaired DNA repair, impaired adaptive stress response, and aberrant neuronal network activity) . Increasing evidence suggested the hallmarks of brain aging affect several brain disease etiologies [316, 317]. MB and PBM can attenuate the pathological symptoms of several brain diseases and lead to neuroprotection by reducing various aspects of mitochondrial dysfunction