| Literature DB >> 36213670 |
Liu Cui1, Jing Weiyao1, Su Chenghong1, Liu Limei1, Zhang Xinghua2, Yuan Bo3, Du Xiaozheng1, Wang Haidong4.
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease characterized by chronic symmetric synovial inflammation and erosive bone destruction. Mitochondria are the main site of cellular energy supply and play a key role in the process of energy metabolism. They possess certain self-regulatory and repair capabilities. Mitochondria maintain relative stability in number, morphology, and spatial structure through biological processes, such as biogenesis, fission, fusion, and autophagy, which are collectively called mitochondrial homeostasis. An imbalance in the mitochondrial homeostatic environment will affect immune cell energy metabolism, synovial cell proliferation, apoptosis, and inflammatory signaling. These biological processes are involved in the onset and development of rheumatoid arthritis. In this review, we found that in rheumatoid arthritis, abnormal mitochondrial homeostasis can mediate various immune cell metabolic disorders, and the reprogramming of immune cell metabolism is closely related to their inflammatory activation. In turn, mitochondrial damage and homeostatic imbalance can lead to mtDNA leakage and increased mtROS production. mtDNA and mtROS are active substances mediating multiple inflammatory pathways. Several rheumatoid arthritis therapeutic agents regulate mitochondrial homeostasis and repair mitochondrial damage. Therefore, modulation of mitochondrial homeostasis would be one of the most attractive targets for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis and proliferation; energy metabolism; immune cells; inflammatory pathways; mitochondrial homeostasis; rheumatoid arthritis
Year: 2022 PMID: 36213670 PMCID: PMC9542797 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.1017650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Mitochondrial homeostatic biological processes and the development of RA. This figure depicts the relationship between mitochondrial biogenesis, mitochondrial dynamics, and mitochondrial autophagy and RA. PGC-1 protein is a key protein regulating mitochondrial biogenesis. In RA, PGC-1 mRNA is regulated by METTL3 and YTHDF, which activate the PGC-1α/NRF1/TFAM pathway to inhibit mitochondrial biogenesis and mediate synovial inflammation. Drp1 and DNM1L are key proteins that regulate mitochondrial division, and their aberrant activation in RA binds to the receptors, Mff and Fisl1, and localizes to the outer mitochondrial membrane, mediating mitochondrial fission and the release of inflammatory substances by GTP hydrolase. Disruption of PINK1 and Parkin protein recruitment activates mitochondrial autophagy to inhibit synovial apoptosis and inflammatory factors.
Figure 2Mitochondrial homeostasis and T-cell energy metabolism. Both glycolysis and FAO mediate T-cell energy metabolism. Deficiency of MRE11A and NMT1 and oxidative phosphorylation during glycolysis metabolism in RA synoviocytes promote the leakage of mtDNA from mitochondria, leading to the secretion of inflammatory substances. During FAO in RA synoviocytes, abnormal activation of AMPK phosphorylation of ACC leads to mitochondrial citric acid transport to the cytoplasm, mediating the secretion of inflammatory substances. Additionally, it activates mTOR, which inhibits mitochondrial autophagy.
Figure 3Mitochondrial homeostasis and RA synoviocyte apoptosis and proliferation. This figure depicts mitochondrial homeostasis and synoviocyte apoptosis, proliferation, and invasion. Downregulation of DNM1L, AOPP, and miR-125-b expression and upregulation of TL1A expression in RA led to disruption of the mitochondrial homeostatic environment and increased release of the anti-apoptotic protein, Bax/Bcl-2, promoting the onset of synovial cell apoptosis. Meanwhile, oxidative phosphorylation in RA synoviocytes was weakened, and glycolysis was increased, forcing increased release of ATP from mitochondria and leading to increased proliferation and invasive activity of synoviocytes.
Figure 4Mitochondrial homeostasis and inflammatory pathways. This figure depicts that imbalance in mitochondrial homeostasis leads to leakage of mtROS and degradation of mtDNA and promotes nuclear transcription of inflammatory factors through three pathways, NLRP3, TLR9/NF-κB, and cGAS/STING.
Effects of common anti-rheumatic drugs on mitochondrial homeostasis.
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| MTX | Folate-dependent ↓ | Inhibits mitochondrial folate synthesis | Inhibits synovial cell proliferation | ( |
| Quercetin | PGC-1α ↓ | Promotes mtDNA | Inhibits TNF-α, IL-6, etc. | ( |
| Resveratrol | PGC-1α ↓ | Promotes mtDNA | Corrects RA metabolic disorders | ( |
| 2-DG | Glycolysis ↓ | Activates AMPK and improves energy metabolism | Inhibits NF-κB | ( |
| Tofacitinib | JAK ↓ | Reverses mitochondrial membrane potential | Lowers glycolytic enzyme genes | ( |
| IRF9 | SIRT1 ↑ | Reverses mitochondrial membrane potential and increases in membrane permeability | NF-κB inhibition and pro-apoptosis | ( |
| Cantleyoside | SIRT1 ↑ | Suppresses OCR and ECAR | NF-κB inhibition and pro-apoptosis | ( |
| Metformin | ETC complexes ↑ | Reduces mitochondrial activity and ATP production | Inhibits synovial cell proliferation | ( |
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| mdivi-1 | DNM1L ↓ | Promotes mitochondrial division | Promotes apoptosis of synovial cells | ( |
| Leflunomide | DHODH ↓ | Inhibits DHODH, promotes Mfn1, Mfn2, and increases mitochondrial fusion | Reduces oxidative stress and inhibits proliferation | ( |
| Sulfasalazine | Increases mitochondrial membrane permeability | Induces T-cell apoptosis | ( | |
| TNF-a inhibitor | TNF-a ↓ | Reduces mitochondrial division | Reduces oxidative stress | ( |
| Icariside | Reverses mitochondrial membrane potential | Induces RA-FLS apoptosis | ( | |
| 7-HT | Enhances mitochondrial pathway Bax/Bcl-2 | Induces apoptosis in FLS cells | ( | |
| β-Elmene | Phosphorylates MAPK pathway | Induces apoptosis | ( | |
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| 5-azacytidine | Methylation ↓ | Enhances PINK1-mediated mitochondrial autophagy | Inhibits cytokines and chemokines | ( |
| Rapamycin | mTOR ↑ | Enhances mitochondrial autophagic activity in synovial cells | Inhibits cytokines | ( |