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Impairment of Neuronal Mitochondrial Quality Control in Prion-Induced Neurodegeneration

Mo‐Jong Kim, Hee‐Jun Kim, Byungki Jang, Hyun‐Ji Kim, Mohd Najib Mostafa, Seok‐Joo Park, Yongsun Kim, Eun‐Kyoung Choi

2022Cells17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mitochondrial dynamics continually maintain cell survival and bioenergetics through mitochondrial quality control processes (fission, fusion, and mitophagy). Aberrant mitochondrial quality control has been implicated in the pathogenic mechanism of various human diseases, including cancer, cardiac dysfunction, and neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and prion disease. However, the mitochondrial dysfunction-mediated neuropathological mechanisms in prion disease are still uncertain. Here, we used both in vitro and in vivo scrapie-infected models to investigate the involvement of mitochondrial quality control in prion pathogenesis. We found that scrapie infection led to the induction of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mtROS) and the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), resulting in enhanced phosphorylation of dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) at Ser616 and its subsequent translocation to the mitochondria, which was followed by excessive mitophagy. We also confirmed decreased expression levels of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) complexes and reduced ATP production by scrapie infection. In addition, scrapie-infection-induced aberrant mitochondrial fission and mitophagy led to increased apoptotic signaling, as evidenced by caspase 3 activation and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage. These results suggest that scrapie infection induced mitochondrial dysfunction via impaired mitochondrial quality control processes followed by neuronal cell death, which may have an important role in the neuropathogenesis of prion diseases.

Topics & Concepts

MitophagyMitochondrionMitochondrial fissionScrapieNeurodegenerationBiologymitochondrial fusionCell biologyPINK1Oxidative phosphorylationDNM1LProgrammed cell deathMitochondrial DNAApoptosisAutophagyMedicineBiochemistryDiseasePathologyGenePrion proteinPrion Diseases and Protein MisfoldingAlzheimer's disease research and treatmentsMitochondrial Function and Pathology
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