| Literature DB >> 35607703 |
Showkat Ul Nabi1, Andleeb Khan2, Ehraz Mehmood Siddiqui3, Muneeb U Rehman4, Saeed Alshahrani2, Azher Arafah4, Sidharth Mehan5, Rana M Alsaffar6, Athanasios Alexiou7,8, Bairong Shen9.
Abstract
Mitochondria play a critical role in neuron viability or death as it regulates energy metabolism and cell death pathways. They are essential for cellular energy metabolism, reactive oxygen species production, apoptosis, Ca++ homeostasis, aging, and regeneration. Mitophagy and mitochondrial dynamics are thus essential processes in the quality control of mitochondria. Improvements in several fundamental features of mitochondrial biology in susceptible neurons of AD brains and the putative underlying mechanisms of such changes have made significant progress. AD's etiology has been reported by mitochondrial malfunction and oxidative damage. According to several recent articles, a continual fusion and fission balance of mitochondria is vital in their normal function maintenance. As a result, the shape and function of mitochondria are inextricably linked. This study examines evidence suggesting that mitochondrial dysfunction plays a significant early impact on AD pathology. Furthermore, the dynamics and roles of mitochondria are discussed with the link between mitochondrial malfunction and autophagy in AD has also been explored. In addition, recent research on mitochondrial dynamics and mitophagy in AD is also discussed in this review. It also goes into how these flaws affect mitochondrial quality control. Furthermore, advanced therapy techniques and lifestyle adjustments that lead to improved management of the dynamics have been demonstrated, hence improving the conditions that contribute to mitochondrial dysfunction in AD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35607703 PMCID: PMC9124149 DOI: 10.1155/2022/4759963
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 7.310
Figure 1Mitochondrial fission and fusion. Mitochondria are active entities with a constant fission and fusion process that mixes their content. Mitochondrial fusion results in mitochondria that are elongated and extensively linked. For the fission pathway, the main proteins are dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), which governs mitochondrial fission in two ways: initially, it is transported from the cytosol to the mitochondrial outer membrane (OM); and secondly, its assembly on the mitochondrial surface causes restriction of the mitochondria, resulting in the division of one mitochondrion into two entities, mitochondrial fission factor (MFF), fission-1 (Fis1), and homologs MiD49 and MiD51. Mitofusins 1 and 2 (MFN1/2) at the outer membrane (OM) and opticatrophy1 (OPA1) at the inner membrane (IM) coordinate mitochondrial fusion, which begins with MFN 1/2-mediated OM fusing of two mitochondria and is accompanied by OPA1-directed IM fusion.
Figure 2Mitochondrial cascade of neurodegeneration. The reactive oxidative species (ROS) that are inevitably produced during the respiration process build up inside the cell, progressively causing damage to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and associated mitochondrial proteins. An instability in mitochondrial dynamics (i.e., fission/fusion) eventually arises, triggering a negative cycle of increasing ROS production, mitochondrial damage and malfunction, and cell death. The neurodegeneration that is characteristic of Alzheimer's disease (AD) happens as a result of this chain of events.
Figure 3Mitochondrial dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease. Mitochondrial abnormalities linked to increased oxidative stress have long been thought to have a factor in the cell death and deterioration seen in Alzheimer's disease. However, as Alzheimer's disease progresses, mitochondria undergo significant changes that result in decreased ATP production and increased reactive oxygen species production (ROS). Mitochondria also lose their calcium (Ca++) buffering capacity, which can set off a chain reaction within the cell that is harmful. When apoptosis is induced, mitochondrial dysfunction releases many proapoptotic molecules. These factors either directly activate apoptosis by associating with cytosolic factors to produce the apoptosome, or they indirectly trigger apoptosis by combining with cytosolic factors to generate the apoptosome. Ultimately, proapoptotic mitochondrial proteins translocate into the nucleus to fragment deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Overall, these mitochondrial changes are associated with cell death and deterioration.
The antioxidants (diet/drug/active principle) having a protective effect against AD with their postulated mechanism of action.
| Diet/drug/active principle | Type of study/animal/cell model | Mechanism of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR) and R- | Geriatric rats | Restoration of cognitive abilities, reduction in oxidative stress markers, and rescuing mitochondrial dynamics in rat parenchymal stoma | [ |
| Coenzyme Q 10 | Preclinical studies | Coenzyme Q 10 specifically targets mitochondrial free radicals, enhances ATP synthesis, and ameliorates mitochondrial dysfunction, henceforth causing improvement in cognitive function. The laboratory animal model (ICV-STZ) of AD supplemented with CoQ10 resulted in restoration of choline acetyl transferase enzymatic activity | [ |
| Clinical studies | In clinical studies, no improvement was reported in clinical cases supplemented with CoQ10 | [ | |
| Creatine | Preclinical studies | In preclinical studies, creatine supplementation was reported to restore motor neuron activity, ameliorates mitochondrial dysfunction, and modulates amyloid-beta-induced cell death | [ |
| Clinical studies | Reduced blood levels of 8-hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosine which is a biomarker of oxidative damage. Henceforth, amelioration of oxidative stress causes restoration of neurological functions in various neurodegenerative diseases | [ | |
| Idebenone | Preclinical studies | Preclinical studies have found Idebenone supplementation inhibits amyloid-beta-induced neurotoxicity | [ |
| Clinical studies | In clinical studies, Idebenone was reported to cause improvement in cognitive and molecular score in Alzheimer's disease | [ | |
| Latrepirdine | Preclinical studies | Latrepirdine acts on various pathways that induce mitochondrial dysfunction | [ |
| Clinical studies | Latrepirdine causes improvement in clinical score of patients with AD | [ | |
| Triterpenoids | Preclinical studies | Triterpenoids were found to cause activation of the Nrf2/ARE signaling pathway which helps in protection of neurons against various types of insults | [ |
| MitoTEMPOL (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6,-tetramethylpiperidine- 1-oxyl) | Preclinical studies | Compound acts on the mitochondrial antioxidant pathway and ameliorated oxidative damage, hence restoring mitochondrial function | [ |
| SS (Szeto-Schiller) peptides | Preclinical studies | These peptides act on multiple pathways, for instance, mitochondrial ROS generation, restore mitochondrial swelling, and henceforth inhibit releases of mitochondrial contents | [ |
| Methylene blue | Preclinical studies | Methylene blue inhibits pathological pathways in AD | [ |
| Curcumin | p25 transgenic mouse model | Reduced oxidative damage and A | [ |
| Melatonin | Tg2576 mice | Decreases the levels of A | [ |
| Dismutase catalase mimetics | AD transgenic mice | Prevented cataracts in AD mice | [ |
| Diets supplemented with vitamin E | AD patients | Amelioration of AD symptoms | [ |
| Combined supplementation of vitamin E and vitamin C | Elderly patients | Therapeutic and prophylactic action against AD | [ |
| Cholinesterase inhibition and huperzine A (an antioxidant) | AD patients | Restoration of cognitive functions and decreased levels of 21 amyloid proteins | [ |
| Synthetic mitochondrial antioxidants |
| Increased lifespan and reproductive rate of yeast | [ |
| SS-31 | Isolated mitochondria | Molecule becomes localized at ROS production | [ |
| SS tetrapeptides | Neuronal cell lines | Protection against mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis | [ |
| N-[4-(Octa-O-acetyllactobionamidomethylene) benzylidene]-N-[1,1-dimethyl-2-(N-octanoyl) amido]-ethylamine N-oxide (LPBNAH) | Rotifers | Neuroprotective activity and antagonizes oxidotoxicity | [ |
| MitoPBN, MitoVitE, MitoQ | Cell lines, laboratory animal model, and clinical patients | Preferential compartmentization inside mitochondria, rapid neutralization of free radical, recycling of these compounds with no significant mitochondrial toxicity | [ |
| Mediterranean diet | Epidemiological studies and clinical trials | Polyphenols, carotenoids, and sulfur compounds act as neuroprotective | [ |
| Dietary polyphenolic compounds | In vitro studies | Mitigate microglial-mediated neuroinflammation | [ |
| Resveratrol | Rodent models | Amyloid deposition is reduced and causes dephosphorylation of tau-hyperphosphorylation proteins | [ |
| Ketogenic diets | Epidemiological studies and clinical trials | Supplies alternative source of energy to neuronal tissue in later life | [ |
| Souvenaid® | Clinical trials | These classes of molecules improve synaptic function by supplying precursors at nerve ends | [ |
| Axona® | Clinical trials | Provides bodies alternative energy supply to neurons | |
| CerefolinNAC® | Clinical trials | Ameliorates oxidative stress | |
| Epigenetic diet | Clinical trials and experimental studies | These type of diets results in DNA methylation and posttranslational modification in histone proteins | [ |
| Huperzine A | Clinical trials and experimental studies | Act as an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor (AchEI), reduces amyloid plaque production, and inhibits cell death by modulating neuronal iron content in animal models of AD | [ |
| Gingko biloba | Clinical trials | Slows progression and ameliorates mild cognitive impairment in AD | [ |
| Cineole | Beta amyloid treated PC12 cells | Reduces inflammation and oxidative stress | [ |
| Coconut oil | Epidemiological studies | The postulated mechanism for the effect is the content of caprylic acid that restores brain function | [ |
| Fish oil | Epidemiological studies | High content of apolipoprotein E which is neuroprotective in nature | [ |
| Thymoquinone | Beta amyloid treated PC12 cells | Inhibition of mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress | [ |
| Organic selenium | Experimental studies | Acts as an antioxidants and helps in regeneration of neurons | [ |
Figure 4Maintaining the mitochondrial bioenergetic performance. Various means can be employed to maintain the mitochondrial bioenergetic performance including cellular therapy, targeting inflammasomes, proteosome, mitochondrial cholesterol, and mtDNA.
Nontoxic mitophagy inducers used as drug candidates for AD.
| S. No. | Nontoxic inducer of mitophagy | Mechanism of action | Clinical trial on AD | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Metformin (Met) | Facilitates Parkin-mediated mitophagy, induces AMPK-independent and SIRT1-mediated pathway | Yes | [ |
| 2. | Nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) | Enhanced PINK-1, PDR-1, or DCT-1-dependent pathways | Yes | [ |
| 3. | Resveratrol (Res) | A stilbenoid activates AMPK and SIRT1 deacetylase activity | Yes | [ |
| 4. | Actinonin | An antibacterial agent promotes mitochondrial fission and enhances kinase activity of PINK1 | No | [ |
| 5. | Rapamycin | Induces genes ( | No | [ |
| 6. | Urolithin A | A gut microbiome-derived natural compound activated mitophagy and reduces inflammation | No | [ |
| 7. | Fisetin | Blocks NLRP3 inflammasome activation via promoting mitophagy, reduces neuroinflammation, and restores cognitive impairment | No | [ |
| 8. | Spermidine | Induces PINK1-PDR1-dependent mitophagy pathway | No | [ |
| 9. | Ciclopirox olamine | Induces mitophagy by dissipation of mitochondrial membrane and DRP-1-dependent mitochondrial fragmentation | No | [ |
| 10. | Nicotinamide (NAM) | Induces mitophagy by increasing the ratio of NAD+/NADH and SIRT1 activation | No | [ |
| 11. | Deferiprone (DFP) | An iron chelator induces mitophagy by a Parkin-independent pathway | No | [ |
| 12. | Kinetin triphosphate (KTP) | PINK1 activity is activated, blocks mitochondrial motility, and inhibits apoptosis in human neurons | No | [ |
| 13. | Pifithrin-a | Specific p53 inhibitor improves mitochondrial dysfunction, protects Parkin-mediated mitophagy | No | [ |
| 14. | Kaempferol and rhapontigenin | The survival of glutamatergic and cholinergic neurons was elevated, enhanced animal memory, and revoke tau and amyloid pathogenesis | No | [ |
Figure 5Therapeutic strategies for the improvement of mitochondrial dynamics.