Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Protein Homeostasis in Aging: Insights from a Premature-Aging Mouse Model

Author:

Ross Jaime M.12,Olson Lars3ORCID,Coppotelli Giuseppe12

Affiliation:

1. George and Anne Ryan Institute for Neuroscience, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI 02881, USA

2. Department of Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI 02881, USA

3. Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, S-17177 Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated in aging and age-related disorders. Disturbed-protein homeostasis and clearance of damaged proteins have also been linked to aging, as well as to neurodegenerative diseases, cancers, and metabolic disorders. However, since mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, ubiquitin–proteasome, and autophagy-lysosome systems are tightly interdependent, it is not understood whether the facets observed in aging are the causes or consequences of one or all of these failed processes. We therefore used prematurely aging mtDNA-mutator mice and normally aging wild-type littermates to elucidate whether mitochondrial dysfunction per se is sufficient to impair cellular protein homeostasis similarly to that which is observed in aging. We found that both mitochondrial dysfunction and normal aging affect the ubiquitin–proteasome system in a tissue-dependent manner, whereas only normal aging markedly impairs the autophagy-lysosome system. Thus, our data show that the proteostasis network control in the prematurely aging mtDNA-mutator mouse differs in certain aspects from that found in normal aging. Taken together, our findings suggest that severe mitochondrial dysfunction drives an aging phenotype associated with the impairment of certain components of the protein homeostasis machinery, while others, such as the autophagy-lysosome system, are not affected or only minimally affected. Taken together, this shows that aging is a multifactorial process resulting from alterations of several integrated biological processes; thus, manipulating one process at the time might not be sufficient to fully recapitulate all changes associated with normal aging.

Funder

Swedish Society for Medical Research

Loo and Hans Osterman Foundation for Medical Research

Foundation for Geriatric Diseases at Karolinska Institutet

KI Research Foundations

ERC Advanced Investigator

Swedish Research Council

Swedish Brain Foundation

Swedish Brain Power

Karolinska Distinguished Professor Award

Swedish Alzheimer’s Foundation

National Institute on Aging

Roddy Foundation

George & Anne Ryan Institute for Neuroscience

College of Pharmacy

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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