| Literature DB >> 34307357 |
Dan Li1, Shengjie Yang1, Yanwei Xing1, Limin Pan1, Ran Zhao1, Yixi Zhao1, Longtao Liu2, Min Wu1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the main cause of death worldwide. Atherosclerosis is the underlying pathological basis of CVD. Mitochondrial homeostasis is maintained through the dynamic processes of fusion and fission. Mitochondria are involved in many cellular processes, such as steroid biosynthesis, calcium homeostasis, immune cell activation, redox signaling, apoptosis, and inflammation, among others. Under stress conditions, mitochondrial dynamics, mitochondrial cristae remodeling, and mitochondrial ROS (mitoROS) production increase, mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) decreases, calcium homeostasis is imbalanced, and mitochondrial permeability transition pore open (mPTP) and release of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) are activated. mtDNA recognized by TLR9 can lead to NF-κB pathway activation and pro-inflammatory factor expression. At the same time, TLR9 can also activate NLRP3 inflammasomes and release interleukin, an event that eventually leads to tissue damage and inflammatory responses. In addition, mitochondrial dysfunction may amplify the activation of NLRP3 through the production of mitochondrial ROS, which together aggravate accumulating mitochondrial damage. In addition, mtDNA defects or gene mutation can lead to mitochondrial oxidative stress. Finally, obesity, diabetes, hypertension and aging are risk factors for the progression of CVD, which are closely related to mitochondrial dynamics. Mitochondrial dynamics may represent a new target in the treatment of atherosclerosis. Antioxidants, mitochondrial inhibitors, and various new therapies to correct mitochondrial dysfunction represent a few directions for future research on therapeutic intervention and amelioration of atherosclerosis.Entities:
Keywords: cytoskeleton; fission; fusion; mitochondria; morphology; transport
Year: 2021 PMID: 34307357 PMCID: PMC8293691 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.673839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Structure of mitochondria and mitochondrial dynamics. (A) The mitochondrion is mainly composed of OMM, mitochondrial membrane gap, IMM, and the mitochondrial matrix. The intima folds inward to form mitochondrial cristae perpendicular to the mitochondrial long axis. Mitochondria produce reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) through the Krebs cycle, which is then oxidized and phosphorylated to release ATP. (B,C) Mitochondrial fusion involves three types of dyneins, namely MFN (Mfn1 and Mfn2), OPA1, and MSTO1. First, the transmembrane GTPases on the mitochondrial outer membrane, namely Mfn1 and Mfn2, fuse through the HR structure. Subsequently, OPA1-mediated IMM fusion occurs in the mitochondrial inner membrane. OPA1 also includes L-OPA1 and the S-OPA1 formed after the removal of L-OPA1 via action of proteolytic enzymes OMA1 and YME1L1. Mitochondrial mitosis is mediated mainly by Drp1. Drp1 is recruited into mitochondria by several ligand proteins (MFF, MIEF1/Mid51, and MIEF2/Mid49) that assemble into spiral fragments around the OMM, induce mitochondrial fission, and complete division by the transport of microtubules and actin. (D) The fusion and fission of mitochondria is a cyclic process. IMM, inner mitochondrial membrane; OMM, outer mitochondrial membrane; OPA1, optic atrophy protein-1; Drp1, dynamin-related protein; NADH, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide.
FIGURE 2The mechanism of atherosclerosis formation caused via dysfunction of mitochondrial function and dynamics. (A) ROS produced in the respiratory chains of mitochondria can cause damage to mtDNA. (B) Ox-LDL induced the change of MMP, lead to Ca2+ influx, ROS production and mitochondrial damage. In addition, the decrease of MFN and OPA1 levels can also lead to the change of MMP and damage of mitochondria. (C) PPAR deletion decreases Mfn2 expression and PGC-1 expression, and leading to mitochondrial dysfunction; AMPK activates endothelial cells through the phosphatidyl inositol 3 kinase protein kinase B (PI3Kb) pathway, stimulates eNOS activation, and generates NO to protect endothelial cells; Mfn2 can inhibit the PI3K/Akt pathway by activating the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway, resulting in VSMC apoptosis. (D) DAMP promotes inflammation by activating PRRs. mtDNA can activate NF-κB and trigger TLR9 signaling pathway to mediate p38 pathway. Mitochondrial damage induces NLRP3 activation, and NLRP3 amplify the production of ROS. (E) Silencing Drp1 can inhibit mitochondrion fission, decrease ROS levels and inhibits smooth muscle cell migration. (F) Mfn2 deficiency leads to the increase of Ca2+ expression in cardiomyocytes, mitochondrial swelling, and eventually leads to cardiac hypertrophy. (G) Diabetes mellitus, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, obesity, hypertension and aging may damage mitochondrial function, and lead to the development of atherosclerosis. mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; Drp1, dynamin-related protein; Mfn1, mitofusin 1; Mfn2, mitofusin 2; OPA1, optic atropy-1; Fis1, mitochondrial fission protein 1; MMP (Δψm), mitochondrial membrane potential; mPTP, mitochondrial permeability transition pore open; Cyt c, cytochrome C; ROS, reactive oxygen species; LOX-1, lectin-type oxidized LDL receptor 1; ox-LDL, oxidized low density lipoprotein; DAMP, damage-associated molecular pattern; PI3K, phosphatidyl inositol 3; NF-κB, nuclear factor-κB; TyrRS-PARP1, tyrosyl transfer- RNA synthetase (TyrRS) and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1).
Natural compounds target mitochondrial to ameliorate atherosclerosis.
| Natural compounds | Sources | Cell types | Changes to mitochondrial | Effects on mitochondria and atherosclerosis | References |
| Resveratrol | HUVECs | Mfn1, Mfn2 and OPA1↑, fission↓, ROS↓ | Attenuated endothelial oxidative injury by regulating mitochondrial fusion, inhibiting mitochondrial fission via TyrRS-PARP1 signaling pathway. | ||
| Salidroside | Component of | VSMCs isolated from aorta of male Sprague Dawley (SD) rats | Drp1↓,Mfn2↑, fission↓, ROS and NADPH↓ | Inhibits high glucose induced proliferation of VSMCs by inhibiting mitochondrial fission and regulating oxidative stress | |
| Corylin | HUVECs A7r5 VSMC and RAW264.7 cells | Drp1 and Drp1 phosphorylation↓, fission↓, ROS↓ | Inhibited the proliferation and migration of mammalian VSMC, in which rapamycin target protein (mTOR)/Dynamin-1 like protein 1 (Drp1) played an important role. | ||
| Ilexgenin A | RAECs and HUVECs | Drp1↓, fission↓ ROS↓, NO↑ | Promote the expression of PSMB5, inhibit ROS production and Drp1 in a Nrf2 dependent manner, thereby inhibiting mitochondrial fission and improving endothelial dysfunction. | ||
| Berberine | mouse podocytes | Drp1↓, MFF↓, Fis1, fission↓, ROS↓ | Improve the mitochondrial damage of glomerular podocytes in DKD mice by inhibiting Drp1, Fis1 and mitochondrial fission. | ||
| Quercetin | Component of hawthorn | Calcifying VSMCs | Drp1↓, fission↓, ROS↓ | Improve mitochondrial cristae rupture, inhibit mitochondrial fission, reduce ROS production, reduce apoptosis of VSMCs, thus alleviate adenine induced aortic calcification in rats. | |
| Vitexin | Component of hawthorn | H9c2 cells | Mfn2↑, Drp1↓, fission↓, ROS↓, inhibited the release of Cyt-c, MMP(Δψm)↑, ATP↑ | Protects H9c2 cells from I/R-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and significantly reduces ROS level by alleviating myocardial I/R injury in rats. | |
| Crocin | Ingredient of saffron | Cells from muscle tissue of rats | Mfn2↑, Drp1↓ | Change insulin resistance index and glucose homeostasis in diabetes by improving mitochondrial fusion and fission indices. | |
| Baicalin | Rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells | Drp1↓, fission↓, Mfn2↑, Drp-1 Ser637 phosphorylation↑, MMP(Δψm)↑, ROS↓, | Protected against hyperglycemia aggravated I/R injury by regulating mitochondrial functions in a manner dependent on AMPK. |