Mitophagy and Oxidative Stress in Cancer and Aging: Focus on Sirtuins and Nanomaterials.
Enza VernucciCarlo TominoFrancesca MolinariDolores LimongiMichele AventaggiatoLuigi SansoneMarco TafaniMatteo Antonio RussoPublished in: Oxidative medicine and cellular longevity (2019)
Mitochondria are the cellular center of energy production and of several important metabolic processes. Mitochondrion health is maintained with a substantial intervention of mitophagy, a process of macroautophagy that degrades selectively dysfunctional and irreversibly damaged organelles. Because of its crucial duty, alteration in mitophagy can cause functional and structural adjustment in the mitochondria, changes in energy production, loss of cellular adaptation, and cell death. In this review, we discuss the dual role that mitophagy plays in cancer and age-related pathologies, as a consequence of oxidative stress, evidencing the triggering stimuli and mechanisms and suggesting the molecular targets for its therapeutic control. Finally, a section has been dedicated to the interplay between mitophagy and therapies using nanoparticles that are the new frontier for a direct and less invasive strategy.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- nlrp inflammasome
- papillary thyroid
- dna damage
- squamous cell
- randomized controlled trial
- public health
- healthcare
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- reactive oxygen species
- diabetic rats
- young adults
- cell cycle arrest
- cell proliferation
- endoplasmic reticulum
- signaling pathway
- social media
- childhood cancer
- health information