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Peripheral modulation of antidepressant targets MAO-B and GABAAR by harmol induces mitohormesis and delays aging in preclinical models.

Luis Filipe Costa-MachadoEsther Garcia-DominguezRebecca L McIntyreJose Luis Lopez-AceitunoÁlvaro Ballesteros-GonzalezAndrea Tapia-GonzalezDavid Fabregat-SafontTobias EisenbergJesús GomezAdrián PlazaAranzazu Sierra-RamirezManuel PérezDavid Villanueva-BermejoTiziana FornariMaría Isabel LozaGonzalo HerradonSebastian J HoferChristoph MagnesFrank MadeoJanet S DuerrOscar J PozoMaximo-Ibo GalindoIsabel Del PinoRiekelt H HoutkooperDiego MegiasJose ViñaMarie-Carmen Gomez-CabreraPablo Jose Fernandez-Marcos
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Reversible and sub-lethal stresses to the mitochondria elicit a program of compensatory responses that ultimately improve mitochondrial function, a conserved anti-aging mechanism termed mitohormesis. Here, we show that harmol, a member of the beta-carbolines family with anti-depressant properties, improves mitochondrial function and metabolic parameters, and extends healthspan. Treatment with harmol induces a transient mitochondrial depolarization, a strong mitophagy response, and the AMPK compensatory pathway both in cultured C2C12 myotubes and in male mouse liver, brown adipose tissue and muscle, even though harmol crosses poorly the blood-brain barrier. Mechanistically, simultaneous modulation of the targets of harmol monoamine-oxidase B and GABA-A receptor reproduces harmol-induced mitochondrial improvements. Diet-induced pre-diabetic male mice improve their glucose tolerance, liver steatosis and insulin sensitivity after treatment with harmol. Harmol or a combination of monoamine oxidase B and GABA-A receptor modulators extend the lifespan of hermaphrodite Caenorhabditis elegans or female Drosophila melanogaster. Finally, two-year-old male and female mice treated with harmol exhibit delayed frailty onset with improved glycemia, exercise performance and strength. Our results reveal that peripheral targeting of monoamine oxidase B and GABA-A receptor, common antidepressant targets, extends healthspan through mitohormesis.
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