To study effects of mitochondrial complex I (CI, NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) deficiency, we inactivated the Ndufs4 gene, which encodes an 18 kDa subunit of the 45-protein CI complex. Although small, Ndufs4 knockout (KO) mice appeared healthy until approximately 5 weeks of age, when ataxic signs began, progressing to death at approximately 7 weeks. KO mice manifested encephalomyopathy including a retarded growth rate, lethargy, loss of motor skill, blindness, and elevated serum lactate. CI activity in submitochondrial particles from KO mice was undetectable by spectrophotometric assays. However, CI-driven oxygen consumption by intact tissue was about half that of controls. Native gel electrophoresis revealed reduced levels of intact CI. These data suggest that CI fails to assemble properly or is unstable without NDUFS4. KO muscle has normal morphology but low NADH dehydrogenase activity and subsarcolemmal aggregates of mitochondria. Nonetheless, total oxygen consumption and muscle ATP and phosphocreatine concentrations measured in vivo were within normal parameters.
Rationale Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated in several cardiovascular diseases; however, the roles of mitochondrial oxidative stress and DNA damage in hypertensive cardiomyopathy are not well understood. Objective We evaluated the contribution of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) to cardiac hypertrophy and failure by using genetic mouse models overexpressing catalase targeted to mitochondria and to peroxisomes. Methods and Results Angiotensin II increases mitochondrial ROS in cardiomyocytes, concomitant with increased mitochondrial protein carbonyls, mitochondrial DNA deletions, increased autophagy and signaling for mitochondrial biogenesis in hearts of Angiotensin II treated mice. The causal role of mitochondrial ROS in Angiotensin II-induced cardiomyopathy is shown by the observation that mice that overexpress catalase targeted to mitochondria, but not mice that overexpress wild-type peroxisomal catalase, are resistant to cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis and mitochondrial damage induced by Angiotensin II, as well as heart failure induced by overexpression of Gαq. Furthermore, primary damage to mitochondrial DNA, induced by zidovudine administration or homozygous mutation of mitochondrial polymerase gamma, is also shown to contribute directly to the development of cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis and failure. Conclusions These data indicate the critical role of mitochondrial ROS in cardiac hypertrophy and failure and support the potential use of mitochondrial-targeted antioxidants for prevention and treatment of hypertensive cardiomyopathy.
The free radical theory of aging proposes that reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced accumulation of damage to cellular macromolecules is a primary driving force of aging and a major determinant of lifespan. Although this theory is one of the most popular explanations for the cause of aging, several experimental rodent models of antioxidant manipulation have failed to affect lifespan. Moreover, antioxidant supplementation clinical trials have been largely disappointing. The mitochondrial theory of aging specifies more particularly that mitochondria are both the primary sources of ROS and the primary targets of ROS damage. In addition to effects on lifespan and aging, mitochondrial ROS have been shown to play a central role in healthspan of many vital organ systems. In this article we review the evidence supporting the role of mitochondrial oxidative stress, mitochondrial damage and dysfunction in aging and healthspan, including cardiac aging, age-dependent cardiovascular diseases, skeletal muscle aging, neurodegenerative diseases, insulin resistance and diabetes as well as age-related cancers. The crosstalk of mitochondrial ROS, redox, and other cellular signaling is briefly presented. Potential therapeutic strategies to improve mitochondrial function in aging and healthspan are reviewed, with a focus on mitochondrial protective drugs, such as the mitochondrial antioxidants MitoQ, SkQ1, and the mitochondrial protective peptide SS-31.
Neuromuscular diseases are often caused by inherited mutations that lead to progressive skeletal muscle weakness and degeneration. In diverse populations of normal healthy mice, we observed correlations between the abundance of mRNA transcripts related to mitochondrial biogenesis, the dystrophin-sarcoglycan complex, and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) synthesis, consistent with a potential role for the essential cofactor NAD+ in protecting muscle from metabolic and structural degeneration. Furthermore, the skeletal muscle transcriptomes of patients with Duchene’s muscular dystrophy (DMD) and other muscle diseases were enriched for various poly[adenosine 5’-diphosphate (ADP)–ribose] polymerases (PARPs) and for nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT), enzymes that are major consumers of NAD+ and are involved in pleiotropic events, including inflammation. In the mdx mouse model of DMD, we observed significant reductions in muscle NAD+ levels, concurrent increases in PARP activity, and reduced expression of nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT), the rate-limiting enzyme for NAD+ biosynthesis. Replenishing NAD+ stores with dietary nicotinamide riboside supplementation improved muscle function and heart pathology in mdx and mdx/Utr−/− mice and reversed pathology in Caenorhabditis elegans models of DMD. The effects of NAD+ repletion in mdx mice relied on the improvement in mitochondrial function and structural protein expression (α-dystrobrevin and δ-sarcoglycan) and on the reductions in general poly(ADP)-ribosylation, inflammation, and fibrosis. In combination, these studies suggest that the replenishment of NAD+ may benefit patients with muscular dystrophies or other neuromuscular degenerative conditions characterized by the PARP/NNMT gene expression signatures.
Faster aging is predicted in more active tissues and animals because of greater reactive oxygen species generation. Yet age-related cell loss is greater in less active cell types, such as type II muscle fibers. Mitochondrial uncoupling has been proposed as a mechanism that reduces reactive oxygen species production and could account for this paradox between longevity and activity. We distinguished these hypotheses by using innovative optical and magnetic resonance spectroscopic methods applied to noninvasively measured ATP synthesis and O 2 uptake in vivo in human muscle. Here we show that mitochondrial function is unchanged with age in mildly uncoupled tibialis anterior muscle (75% type I) despite a high respiratory rate in adults. In contrast, substantial uncoupling and loss of cellular [ATP] indicative of mitochondrial dysfunction with age was found in the lower respiring and well coupled first dorsal interosseus (43-50% type II) of the same subjects. These results reject respiration rate as the sole factor impacting the tempo of cellular aging. Instead, they support mild uncoupling as a mechanism protecting mitochondrial function and contributing to the paradoxical longevity of the most active muscle fibers. magnetic resonance spectroscopy ͉ optical spectroscopy ͉ oxidative phosphorylation T he rate-of-living hypothesis proposes that higher rates of oxidative metabolism cause an increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) (1), leading to oxidative damage and mitochondrial dysfunction with age. However, mice with the lowest resting respiration rate have been shown to have the shortest longevity (2). Similarly, isolated muscle fibers show greater generation of ROS in type II fibers (3), which have the lowest oxidative capacity and chronic activity levels. This fiber type also has the shortest longevity and is the first to be lost with age (4). Thus, the tempo of aging appears to vary among mice and muscle fiber types but in an opposite manner than predicted by the rate-of-living hypothesis, with the least active having the shortest longevity.A physiological mechanism that could account for this paradox is mild mitochondrial uncoupling, which has been proposed to ameliorate ROS production by reducing reverse electron flow and superoxide generation (5). Consistent with this prediction are findings in mice with high respiration rates that showed elevated proton leak in isolated muscle mitochondria as a result of activation of the adenine nucleotide translocator and uncoupling protein 3. Mild uncoupling resulting from activation of these mitochondrial factors in type I muscle fibers could reduce ROS production, protect mitochondria from damage, and account for the longevity of this fiber type with age. A number of studies have provided evidence of mild uncoupling in human muscles (6, 7) but have not tested whether this uncoupling protects against mitochondrial dysfunction and cellular aging.New methods permit measurement of mitochondrial coupling in vivo by using a combination of noninvasive spectroscopi...
Mitochondrial protein interactions and complexes facilitate mitochondrial function. These complexes range from simple dimers to the respirasome supercomplex consisting of oxidative phosphorylation complexes I, III, and IV. To improve understanding of mitochondrial function, we used chemical cross-linking mass spectrometry to identify 2,427 cross-linked peptide pairs from 327 mitochondrial proteins in whole, respiring murine mitochondria. In situ interactions were observed in proteins throughout the electron transport chain membrane complexes, ATP synthase, and the mitochondrial contact site and cristae organizing system (MICOS) complex. Cross-linked sites showed excellent agreement with empirical protein structures and delivered complementary constraints for in silico protein docking. These data established direct physical evidence of the assembly of the complex I-III respirasome and enabled prediction of in situ interfacial regions of the complexes. Finally, we established a database and tools to harness the cross-linked interactions we observed as molecular probes, allowing quantification of conformation-dependent protein interfaces and dynamic protein complex assembly. mitochondria | mass spectrometry | interactome | cross-linking | protein interaction reporter M itochondrial proteins play a diverse role in cellular biology and disease. Mitochondrial dysfunction directly causes multiple inherited diseases (1) and is implicated in common diseases, including neurological developmental disorders (2, 3), neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases (4-6), diabetes (7), asthma (8), cancer (9), and age-related disease (10). In mammals, these organelles have evolved to retain more than 1,000 proteins that interact within a complex, i.e., dual membrane architecture (11,12). Within the mitochondrial proteome, the "powerhouse" functions are carried out by the core constituents of the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) system [complexes I-IV of the electron transport chain (ETC) and ATP synthase (complex V)]. These proteins are necessary for creation of the mitochondrial electrochemical gradient that powers synthesis of ATP. This system includes critical protein-protein interactions within individual OXPHOS complexes as well as "supercomplex" interactions between ETC complexes I, III, and IV in the respirasome (13). Deficient supercomplex formation has been proposed as a critical mitochondrial defect in failing hearts (5,6,14,15), and dynamic rearrangement of supercomplexes has been implicated in noncanonical mitochondrial functions such as antibacterial innate immune responses (16). Assessing these interactions is further complicated by regulatory posttranslational modification and conformational changes of mitochondrial proteins (17)(18)(19)(20). Advances in this area have been impeded, in part, by the lack of large-scale detection of dynamic, sometimes transient, interactions between membrane proteins. Thus, large-scale determination of the protein interactome within mitochondria would provide a valuable tool to adv...
Summary Mitochondrial dysfunction plays a key pathogenic role in aging skeletal muscle resulting in significant healthcare costs in the developed world. However, there is no pharmacologic treatment to rapidly reverse mitochondrial deficits in the elderly. Here we demonstrate that a single treatment with the mitochondrial targeted peptide SS-31 restores in vivo mitochondrial energetics to young levels in aged mice after only one hour. Young (5 month old) and old (27 month old) mice were injected intraperitoneally with either saline or 3 mg/kg of SS-31. Skeletal muscle mitochondrial energetics were measured in vivo one hour after injection using a unique combination of optical and 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Age related declines in resting and maximal mitochondrial ATP production, coupling of oxidative phosphorylation (P/O), and cell energy state (PCr/ATP) were rapidly reversed after SS-31 treatment, while SS-31 had no observable effect on young muscle. These effects of SS-31 on mitochondrial energetics in aged muscle were also associated with a more reduced glutathione redox status and lower mitochondrial H2O2 emission. Skeletal muscle of aged mice was more fatigue resistant in situ one hour after SS-31 treatment and eight days of SS-31 treatment led to increased whole animal endurance capacity. These data demonstrate that SS-31 represents a new strategy for reversing age-related deficits in skeletal muscle with potential for translation into human use.
SummaryMitochondrial defects have been found in aging and several age-related diseases. Mice with a homozygous mutation in the exonuclease encoding domain of mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma (Polg m ⁄ m ) are prone to age-dependent accumulation of mitochondrial DNA mutations and have shown a broad spectrum of aging-like phenotypes. However, the mechanism of cardiac phenotypes in relation to the role of mitochondrial DNA mutations and oxidative stress in this mouse model has not been fully addressed. We demonstrate agedependent cardiomyopathy in Polg m ⁄ m mice, which by 13-14 months of age displays marked cardiac hypertrophy and dilatation, impairment of systolic and diastolic function, and increased cardiac fibrosis. This age-dependent cardiomyopathy is associated with increases in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletions and protein oxidative damage, increased expression of apoptotic and senescence markers, as well as a decline in signaling for mitochondrial biogenesis. The relationship of these changes to mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) was tested by crossing Polg m ⁄ m mice with mice that overexpress mitochondrial targeted catalase (mCAT). All of the above phenotypes were partially rescued in Polg m ⁄ m ⁄ mCAT mice. These data indicate that accumulation of mitochondrial DNA damage with age can lead to cardiomyopathy and that this phenotype is partly mediated by mitochondrial oxidative stress.
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