4.7 Article

Metformin mediates cardioprotection against aging-induced ischemic necroptosis

Journal

AGING CELL
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/acel.13096

Keywords

aging; autophagy defect; cardioprotection; ischemia; reperfusion injury; metformin; myocardial necroptosis

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Research and Development Program of Shaanxi Province, China [2015KW-050, 2018SF-101, 2018SF-270]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31201037, 31571413, 31671424, 81322004, 91749108]

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Necroptosis is crucially involved in severe cardiac pathological conditions. However, whether necroptosis contributes to age-related intolerance to ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury remains elusive. In addition, metformin as a potential anti-aging related injury drug, how it interacts with myocardial necroptosis is not yet clear. Male C57BL/6 mice at 3-4- (young) and 22-24 months of age (aged) and RIPK3-deficient (Ripk3(-/-)) mice were used to investigate aging-related I/R injury in vivo. Metformin (125 mu g/kg, i.p.), necrostatin-1 (3.5 mg/kg), and adenovirus vector encoding p62-shRNAs (Ad-sh-p62) were used to treat aging mice. I/R-induced myocardial necroptosis was exaggerated in aged mice, which correlated with autophagy defects characterized by p62 accumulation in aged hearts or aged human myocardium. Functionally, blocking autophagic flux promoted H/R-evoked cardiomyocyte necroptosis in vitro. We further revealed that p62 forms a complex with RIP1-RIP3 (necrosome) and promotes the binding of RIP1 and RIP3. In mice, necrostatin-1 treatment (a RIP1 inhibitor), RIP3 deficiency, and cardiac p62 knockdown in vivo demonstrated that p62-RIP1-RIP3-dependent myocardial necroptosis contributes to aging-related myocardial vulnerability to I/R injury. Notably, metformin treatment disrupted p62-RIP1-RIP3 complexes and effectively repressed I/R-induced necroptosis in aged hearts, ultimately reducing mortality in this model. These findings highlight previously unknown mechanisms of aging-related myocardial ischemic vulnerability: p62-necrosome-dependent necroptosis. Metformin acts as a cardioprotective agent that inhibits this unfavorable chain mechanism of aging-related I/R susceptibility.

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