Come and eat: mitochondrial transport guides mitophagy in ischemic neuronal axons.
Yanrong ZhengXiaoli WuZhong ChenXiang-Nan ZhangPublished in: Autophagy (2019)
Mitophagy is the sole mechanism for neurons to eliminate superfluous or damaged mitochondria. Although the critical implications of mitophagy have been emphasized in a variety of neurological disorders, it remains ambiguous how neurons control the quality of axonal mitochondria. By employing an oxygen-glucose-deprivation and reperfusion (OGD-Rep) model in cultured neurons, our recent results clearly documented the prompt recovery of retrograde transport of axonal mitochondria to neuronal soma. Moreover, by selectively labeling axonal mitochondria, we found that these axonal mitochondria appear in neuronal soma and are eliminated via autophagosomes in priority. This mitochondrial movement from axon to soma has a critical contribution to overall neuronal mitophagy under ischemia. Because forced expression of an anchoring protein, SNPH (Syntaphilin), significantly blocks mitophagy, and aggravates mitochondrial dysfunction and neuronal injury. Conversely, promoted retrograde mitochondrial movement facilitates neuronal mitophagy and attenuates ischemic neuronal demise. In conclusion, we propose stimulating the somatic autophagy of axonal mitochondria after ischemic insults. These findings may provide further insight into how neurons control the mitochondrial quality in pathological conditions and offer novel strategies to cure neurological disorders.
Keyphrases
- cerebral ischemia
- cell death
- spinal cord injury
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- oxidative stress
- blood brain barrier
- brain injury
- reactive oxygen species
- spinal cord
- endoplasmic reticulum
- nlrp inflammasome
- optic nerve
- gene expression
- poor prognosis
- heart failure
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- long non coding rna
- acute myocardial infarction
- blood pressure
- left ventricular
- small molecule
- adipose tissue
- signaling pathway
- acute coronary syndrome
- metabolic syndrome
- amino acid
- atrial fibrillation