4.5 Article

Bioenergetics and metabolism: a bench to bedside perspective

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 139, Issue -, Pages 126-135

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.13509

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; bioenergetics; metabolism; mitochondria; neurodegeneration

Funding

  1. NCATS NIH HHS [UL1 TR000001] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIA NIH HHS [P30 AG035982] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NINDS NIH HHS [R03 NS077852] Funding Source: Medline

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Metabolism' refers to the vast collection of chemical processes that occur within a living organism. Within this broad designation, one can identify metabolism events that relate specifically to energy homeostasis, whether they occur at the subcellular, cellular, organ, or whole organism level. This review operationally refers to this type of metabolism as energy metabolism' or bioenergetics.' Changes in energy metabolism/bioenergetics have been linked to brain aging and a number of neurodegenerative diseases, and research suggests mitochondria may uniquely contribute to this. Interventions that manipulate energy metabolism/bioenergetic function and mitochondria may have therapeutic potential and efforts intended to accomplish this are playing out at basic, translational, and clinical levels. This review follows evolving views of energy metabolism's role in neurodegenerative diseases but especially Alzheimer's disease, with an emphasis on the bench-to-bedside process whose ultimate goal is to develop therapeutic interventions. It further considers challenges encountered during this process, which include linking basic concepts to a medical question at the initial research stage, adapting conceptual knowledge gained to a disease-associated application in the translational stage, extending what has been learned to the clinical arena, and maintaining support for the research at each of these fundamentally linked but functionally distinct stages.

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