| Literature DB >> 34366851 |
Assraa Hassan Jassim1, Denise M Inman2, Claire H Mitchell1,3,4.
Abstract
Mitochondrial dysfunction and excessive inflammatory responses are both sufficient to induce pathology in age-dependent neurodegenerations. However, emerging evidence indicates crosstalk between damaged mitochondrial and inflammatory signaling can exacerbate issues in chronic neurodegenerations. This review discusses evidence for the interaction between mitochondrial damage and inflammation, with a focus on glaucomatous neurodegeneration, and proposes that positive feedback resulting from this crosstalk drives pathology. Mitochondrial dysfunction exacerbates inflammatory signaling in multiple ways. Damaged mitochondrial DNA is a damage-associated molecular pattern, which activates the NLRP3 inflammasome; priming and activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome, and the resulting liberation of IL-1β and IL-18 via the gasdermin D pore, is a major pathway to enhance inflammatory responses. The rise in reactive oxygen species induced by mitochondrial damage also activates inflammatory pathways, while blockage of Complex enzymes is sufficient to increase inflammatory signaling. Impaired mitophagy contributes to inflammation as the inability to turnover mitochondria in a timely manner increases levels of ROS and damaged mtDNA, with the latter likely to stimulate the cGAS-STING pathway to increase interferon signaling. Mitochondrial associated ER membrane contacts and the mitochondria-associated adaptor molecule MAVS can activate NLRP3 inflammasome signaling. In addition to dysfunctional mitochondria increasing inflammation, the corollary also occurs, with inflammation reducing mitochondrial function and ATP production; the resulting downward spiral accelerates degeneration. Evidence from several preclinical models including the DBA/2J mouse, microbead injection and transient elevation of IOP, in addition to patient data, implicates both mitochondrial damage and inflammation in glaucomatous neurodegeneration. The pressure-dependent hypoxia and the resulting metabolic vulnerability is associated with mitochondrial damage and IL-1β release. Links between mitochondrial dysfunction and inflammation can occur in retinal ganglion cells, microglia cells and astrocytes. In summary, crosstalk between damaged mitochondria and increased inflammatory signaling enhances pathology in glaucomatous neurodegeneration, with implications for other complex age-dependent neurodegenerations like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.Entities:
Keywords: NLRP3 infammasome; astrocyte; glaucoma; metabolic vulnerability; microglia; mitophagy; retinal ganglion cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 34366851 PMCID: PMC8334009 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.699623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1This schematic illustrates the proposed cascade of events that link the increased intraocular pressure of glaucoma to mitochondrial dysfunction and the NLRP3 inflammasome. (A) Intraocular pressure increases as a result of perturbed aqueous humor outflow in the eye. (B) Intraocular pressure increase prevents efficient blood flow to the eye, resulting in hypoxia/ischemia. During physiological conditions, hypoxia induces mitophagy to eliminate dysfunctional mitochondrial accumulation. (C) However, during glaucoma, hypoxia-induced mitophagy may be inhibited. Concomitantly, external ATP binds to and opens the cation-selective P2X7R (D). Ca2+ influx can stimulate mitochondrial dysfunction that will induce inflammation, activated microglia, and cytokine release. (E) Dysfunctional and fragmented mitochondria accumulate, thus promoting oxidative stress and metabolic vulnerability. Oxidative stress induces inflammasome assembly and activation as NLRP3, localized at the ER, comes into proximity to the ASC, localized at the mitochondria, on MAMs. (F) Inflammasome activation releases cytokines that establish a positive feedback loop to exacerbate further inflammatory response. (G) Aβ that has been demonstrated in mitochondria can also accumulate in axons, thereby inducing axon transport deficit that further contributes to glaucoma progression. Created with Biorender.com
Pharmacological targets to ameliorate mitochondrial dysfunction and inflammation.
| Protein/Gene | Biological target | Targeted pathway | Scientific evidence | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIF-1α | Nucleus | Hypoxic response | Hypoxia preconditioniong rescue RGC during glaucoma |
|
| KATP channel | Membrane | Metabolic function | KATP blockers reduced IL-1β release; KATP opener protected RGCs from ischemic damage |
|
| HCAR1 | Mitochondria |
| Ketogenic diet stimulates HCAR1 to inhibit NLRP3 inflammasome in glaucoma |
|
| AMPK | Cytosol | Energy sensor protein kinase | Ketogenic diet reduced metabolic vulnerability and AMPK-induceds inflammation |
|
| cGAS | Interferon in cytosol | STING pathway | Detects leaked mtDNA |
|
| Aβ | Cytosol, mitochondria | Biomarker of neurodegeneration, impaired clearance | Accumulates in mitochondria cristae, blocks function; induces pro-inflamatory cytokines via P2X7R |
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