| Literature DB >> 34211627 |
Jia Huang1,2, Ruibing Li1, Chengbin Wang1.
Abstract
A healthy mitochondrial network produces a large amount of ATP and biosynthetic intermediates to provide sufficient energy for myocardium and maintain normal cell metabolism. Mitochondria form a dynamic and interconnected network involved in various cellular metabolic signaling pathways. As mitochondria are damaged, controlling mitochondrial quantity and quality is activated by changing their morphology and tube network structure, mitophagy, and biogenesis to replenish a healthy mitochondrial network to preserve cell function. There is no doubt that mitochondrial dysfunction has become a key factor in many diseases. Ischemia/reperfusion (IR) injury is a pathological manifestation of various heart diseases. Cardiac ischemia causes temporary tissue and organelle damage. Although reperfusion is essential to compensate for nutrient deficiency, blood flow restoration inconsequently further kills the previously ischemic cardiomyocytes. To date, dysfunctional mitochondria and disturbed mitochondrial quality control have been identified as critical IR injury mechanisms. Many researchers have detected abnormal mitochondrial morphology and mitophagy, as well as aberrant levels and activity of mitochondrial biogenesis factors in the IR injury model. Although mitochondrial damage is well-known in myocardial IR injury, the causal relationship between abnormal mitochondrial quality control and IR injury has not been established. This review briefly describes the molecular mechanisms of mitochondrial quality control, summarizes our current understanding of the complex role of mitochondrial quality control in IR injury, and finally speculates on the possibility of targeted control of mitochondria and the methods available to mitigate IR injury.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34211627 PMCID: PMC8211512 DOI: 10.1155/2021/5543452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Injury mechanism involved in mitochondria at different stages of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion. Ischemia/reperfusion (IR) injury is divided into two stages, ischemia and reperfusion. Both involve a decline in ATP synthesis. In the phase of ischemia, the damaged mitochondrial respiratory chain will reduce ATP synthesis, coupled with continuous energy consumption of other tissues and organelles, resulting in a significant decrease in ATP content. Due to a lack of energy supply and increased vascular permeability, myocardial ischemia can cause temporary tissue damage. In the reperfusion phase, in addition to the continuous decline of ATP synthesis, the mitochondrial respiratory chain will also excessively produce ROS. ROS mediates prolonged mPTP opening that forms a channel to release cytochrome c and then activate the apoptotic cascade of cardiomyocytes, which further aggravates tissue damage.
Figure 2Quality control mechanism of mitochondria in IR injury. In normal mitochondrial biogenesis, mtDNA synthesis is mainly regulated by PGC-1, and PGC-1 interacts with nuclear receptors (including NRF-1 and NRF-2) to participate in the expression of various nuclear coding genes and Tfam, and transcription factors Tfam and NRFs are jointly responsible for regulating mtDNA replication and transcription. Nuclear DNA synthesizes precursor proteins in the cytoplasm and is transported in an unfolded form into the mitochondria, where precursor proteins fold into functional proteins with molecular chaperones. A small portion of lipids are synthesized in mitochondria, and the rest are transported into mitochondria after synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum to form the inner and outer membrane structure. Mitochondrial fission is a signal of injury. After activation by phosphorylation, Drp1 translocates from the cytoplasm to the mitochondrial membrane and binds to Drp1 receptors (Mff, Fis1, and Mid49/51), which are the sites of enclosing mitochondria to be separated and mediate the mitochondrial division into fragments. Excessive mitochondrial fragmentation during IR eventually leads to cell death. Mitochondrial fusion inhibits mitochondrial fragmentation, reticular structure destruction, and mitochondrial cristae remodeling. Mfn1 and Mfn2 mediate OMM fusion, and Opa1 mediates IMM fusion. Mitochondrial fusion decreased significantly during IR injury. The function of mitophagy in myocardial IR remains unclear. Three main pathways are found to mediate mitophagy: PINK1/Parkin pathway may induce excessive mitophagy in myocardial IR, thereby promoting cell death; BNIP3/NIX is a protein located in OMM, which directly binds to LC3 on autophagosomes and mediates mitophagy. But its function in myocardial IR remains controversial; FUNDC1 is also an LC3 receptor located in mitochondria, and its LIR binds to LC3 to mediate mitophagy, which mainly plays a protective role in myocardial IR injury.
Therapeutic application targeting MQC to attenuate IR injury.
| Therapies | Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|
| Dapagliflozin | Improve left ventricular function | Lahnwong et al., 2020 [ |
| Melatonin | Improve PPAR | Zhou et al., 2017 [ |
| Istaroxime | Stimulate SERCA to dilate blood vessels and decrease ROS production | Hasenfuss et al., 2011 [ |
| SS31-Mito | Enhance LVEF and energy integrity with higher PGC-1 | Lee et al., 2018 [ |