4.7 Article

Celastrol Inhibits Dopaminergic Neuronal Death of Parkinson's Disease through Activating Mitophagy

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox9010037

Keywords

autophagy; celastrol; dopaminergic neurons; mitophagy; Parkinson's disease

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan [MOST 105-2320-B-039-009-, MOST 108-2320-B-039-029-MY3]
  2. China Medical University Hospital [DMR-106-131]
  3. iEGG
  4. Animal Biotechnology Center from The Feature Areas Research Center Program within Ministry of Education [MOE-107-S-0023-E]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disease, which is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and abnormal protein accumulation. No treatment can stop or slow PD. Autophagy inhibits neuronal death by removing damaged mitochondria and abnormal protein aggregations. Celastrol is a triterpene with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects. Up until now, no reports have shown that celastrol improves PD motor symptoms. In this study, we used PD cell and mouse models to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy and mechanism of celastrol. In the substantia nigra, we found lower levels of autophagic activity in patients with sporadic PD as compared to healthy controls. In neurons, celastrol enhances autophagy, autophagosome biogenesis (Beclin 1 up arrow, Ambra1 up arrow, Vps34 up arrow, Atg7 up arrow, Atg12 up arrow, and LC3-II up arrow), and mitophagy (PINK1 up arrow, DJ-1 up arrow, and LRRK2 down arrow), and these might be associated with MPAK signaling pathways. In the PD cell model, celastrol reduces MPP+-induced dopaminergic neuronal death, mitochondrial membrane depolarization, and ATP reduction. In the PD mouse model, celastrol suppresses motor symptoms and neurodegeneration in the substantia nigra and striatum and enhances mitophagy (PINK1 up arrow and DJ-1 up arrow) in the striatum. Using MPP+ to induce mitochondrial damage in neurons, we found celastrol controls mitochondrial quality by sequestering impaired mitochondria into autophagosomes for degradation. This is the first report to show that celastrol exerts neuroprotection in PD by activating mitophagy to degrade impaired mitochondria and further inhibit dopaminergic neuronal apoptosis. Celastrol may help to prevent and treat PD.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available