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      Melatonin improves mitochondrial biogenesis through the AMPK/PGC1α pathway to attenuate ischemia/reperfusion-induced myocardial damage

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          Abstract

          Cardiac ischemia/reperfusion injury is associated with reduced mitochondrial turnover and regeneration. There is currently no effective approach to stimulate mitochondrial biogenesis in the reperfused myocardium. In this study, we investigated whether melatonin could increase mitochondrial biogenesis and thus promote mitochondrial homeostasis in cardiomyocytes. Cardiomyocytes were subjected to hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R) injury with or without melatonin treatment, and various mitochondrial functions were measured. H/R injury repressed mitochondrial biogenesis in cardiomyocytes, whereas melatonin treatment restored mitochondrial biogenesis through the 5’ adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK)/peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1 alpha (PGC1α) pathway. Melatonin enhanced mitochondrial metabolism, inhibited mitochondrial oxidative stress, induced mitochondrial fusion and prevented mitochondrial apoptosis in cardiomyocytes subjected to H/R injury. The melatonin-induced improvement in mitochondrial biogenesis was associated with increased cardiomyocyte survival during H/R injury. On the other hand, silencing of PGC1α attenuated the protective effects of melatonin on cardiomyocyte viability, thereby impairing mitochondrial bioenergetics, disrupting the mitochondrial morphology, and activating mitochondrial apoptosis. Thus, H/R injury suppressed mitochondrial biogenesis, while melatonin activated the AMPK/PGC1α pathway and restored mitochondrial biogenesis, ultimately protecting the reperfused heart.

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          Autophagy-dependent cell death

          Autophagy-dependent cell death can be defined as cell demise that has a strict requirement of autophagy. Although autophagy often accompanies cell death following many toxic insults, the requirement of autophagic machinery for cell death execution, as established through specific genetic or chemical inhibition of the process, is highly contextual. During animal development, perhaps the best validated model of autophagy-dependent cell death is the degradation of the larval midgut during larval-pupal metamorphosis, where a number of key autophagy genes are required for the removal of the tissues. Surprisingly though, even in the midgut, not all of the 'canonical' autophagic machinery appears to be required. In other organisms and cancer cells many variations of autophagy-dependent cell death are apparent, pointing to the lack of a unifying cell death pathway. It is thus possible that components of the autophagy machinery are selectively utilised or repurposed for this type of cell death. In this review, we discuss examples of cell death that utilise autophagy machinery (or part thereof), the current knowledge of the complexity of autophagy-dependent cellular demise and the potential mechanisms and regulatory pathways involved in such cell death.
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            Pathogenesis of cardiac ischemia reperfusion injury is associated with CK2α-disturbed mitochondrial homeostasis via suppression of FUNDC1-related mitophagy

            Disturbed mitochondrial homeostasis contributes to the pathogenesis of cardiac ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury, although the underlying mechanism remains elusive. Here, we demonstrated that casein kinase 2α (CK2α) was upregulated following acute cardiac IR injury. Increased CK2α was shown to be instrumental to mitochondrial damage, cardiomyocyte death, infarction area expansion and cardiac dysfunction, whereas cardiac-specific CK2α knockout (CK2α CKO ) mice were protected against IR injury and mitochondrial damage. Functional assay indicated that CK2α enhanced the phosphorylation (inactivation) of FUN14 domain containing 1 (FUNDC1) via post-transcriptional modification at Ser13, thus effectively inhibiting mitophagy. Defective mitophagy failed to remove damaged mitochondria induced by IR injury, resulting in mitochondrial genome collapse, electron transport chain complex (ETC) inhibition, mitochondrial biogenesis arrest, cardiolipin oxidation, oxidative stress, mPTP opening, mitochondrial debris accumulation and eventually mitochondrial apoptosis. In contrast, loss of CK2α reversed the FUNDC1-mediated mitophagy, providing a survival advantage to myocardial tissue following IR stress. Interestingly, mice deficient in both CK2α and FUNDC1 failed to show protection against IR injury and mitochondrial damage through a mechanism possible attributed to lack of mitophagy. Taken together, our results confirmed that CK2α serves as a negative regulator of mitochondrial homeostasis via suppression of FUNDC1-required mitophagy, favoring the development of cardiac IR injury.
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              Melatonin protects cardiac microvasculature against ischemia/reperfusion injury via suppression of mitochondrial fission‐VDAC1‐HK2‐mPTP‐mitophagy axis

              Abstract The cardiac microvascular system, which is primarily composed of monolayer endothelial cells, is the site of blood supply and nutrient exchange to cardiomyocytes. However, microvascular ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI) following percutaneous coronary intervention is a woefully neglected topic, and few strategies are available to reverse such pathologies. Here, we studied the effects of melatonin on microcirculation IRI and elucidated the underlying mechanism. Melatonin markedly reduced infarcted area, improved cardiac function, restored blood flow, and lower microcirculation perfusion defects. Histological analysis showed that cardiac microcirculation endothelial cells (CMEC) in melatonin‐treated mice had an unbroken endothelial barrier, increased endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression, unobstructed lumen, reduced inflammatory cell infiltration, and less endothelial damage. In contrast, AMP‐activated protein kinase α (AMPKα) deficiency abolished the beneficial effects of melatonin on microvasculature. In vitro, IRI activated dynamin‐related protein 1 (Drp1)‐dependent mitochondrial fission, which subsequently induced voltage‐dependent anion channel 1 (VDAC1) oligomerization, hexokinase 2 (HK2) liberation, mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) opening, PINK1/Parkin upregulation, and ultimately mitophagy‐mediated CMEC death. However, melatonin strengthened CMEC survival via activation of AMPKα, followed by p‐Drp1S616 downregulation and p‐Drp1S37 upregulation, which blunted Drp1‐dependent mitochondrial fission. Suppression of mitochondrial fission by melatonin recovered VDAC1‐HK2 interaction that prevented mPTP opening and PINK1/Parkin activation, eventually blocking mitophagy‐mediated cellular death. In summary, this study confirmed that melatonin protects cardiac microvasculature against IRI. The underlying mechanism may be attributed to the inhibitory effects of melatonin on mitochondrial fission‐VDAC1‐HK2‐mPTP‐mitophagy axis via activation of AMPKα.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Aging (Albany NY)
                Aging (Albany NY)
                Aging
                Aging (Albany NY)
                Impact Journals
                1945-4589
                30 April 2020
                19 April 2020
                : 12
                : 8
                : 7299-7312
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Cardiology, Tianjin First Central Hospital, Tianjing 300192, China
                [2 ]Department of Cardiology, the First Medical Center, Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing 100853, China
                Author notes
                Correspondence to: Xueyan Qi; email: qixueyan100@163.com
                Article
                103078 103078
                10.18632/aging.103078
                7202489
                32305957
                9f36ed5d-a63e-4cca-a2a5-35d1ce911ac4
                Copyright © 2020 Qi et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 22 October 2019
                : 24 March 2020
                Categories
                Research Paper

                Cell biology
                melatonin,mitochondrial biogenesis,mitochondrial dysfunction,ischemia-reperfusion injury

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