Dysfunctional mitochondria in age-related neurodegeneration: Utility of melatonin as an antioxidant treatment
Mitochondria functionally degrade as neurons age. Degenerative changes cause inefficient oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and elevated electron leakage from the electron transport chain (ETC) promoting increased intramitochondrial generation of damaging reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen specie...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ageing research reviews 2024-11, Vol.101, p.102480, Article 102480 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Mitochondria functionally degrade as neurons age. Degenerative changes cause inefficient oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and elevated electron leakage from the electron transport chain (ETC) promoting increased intramitochondrial generation of damaging reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen species (ROS and RNS). The associated progressive accumulation of molecular damage causes an increasingly rapid decline in mitochondrial physiology contributing to aging. Melatonin, a multifunctional free radical scavenger and indirect antioxidant, is synthesized in the mitochondrial matrix of neurons. Melatonin reduces electron leakage from the ETC and elevates ATP production; it also detoxifies ROS/RNS and via the SIRT3/FOXO pathway it upregulates activities of superoxide dismutase 2 and glutathione peroxidase. Melatonin also influences glucose processing by neurons. In neurogenerative diseases, neurons often adopt Warburg-type metabolism which excludes pyruvate from the mitochondria causing reduced intramitochondrial acetyl coenzyme A production. Acetyl coenzyme A supports the citric acid cycle and OXPHOS. Additionally, acetyl coenzyme A is a required co-substrate for arylalkylamine-N-acetyl transferase, which rate limits melatonin synthesis; therefore, melatonin production is diminished in cells that experience Warburg-type metabolism making mitochondria more vulnerable to oxidative stress. Moreover, endogenously produced melatonin diminishes during aging, further increasing oxidative damage to mitochondrial components. More normal mitochondrial physiology is preserved in aging neurons with melatonin supplementation.
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•Neurons are exposed to melatonin from intrinsic mitochondria and the pineal gland.•Melatonin reverses Warburg metabolism in pathological neurons.•Both pineal and mitochondrial-derived melatonin diminish with age.•Melatonin supports the transfer of mitochondria through tunnelling nanotubes.•Melatonin supplementation defers mitochondrial aging, preserving cell physiology. |
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ISSN: | 1568-1637 1872-9649 1872-9649 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.arr.2024.102480 |