4.3 Article

Hippocampal mitochondrial dysfunction in rat aging

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00492.2007

Keywords

mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase; reduced nicotinamide adenide dinucleotide dehydrogenase; cytochrome oxidase; oxidative damage

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Hippocampus mitochondrial dysfunction with impaired electron transfer and increased oxidative damage was observed upon rat aging. Hippocampal mitochondria of aged (12 mo) and senescent (20 mo) rats showed, compared with young (4 mo) rats, marked decreases in the rate of state 3 respiration with NAD-dependent substrates (32-51%) and in the activities of mitochondrial complexes I (57-73%) and IV (33-54%). The activity of mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase was also decreased, 53-66%, with age. These losses in enzymatic activity were more marked in the hippocampus than in brain cortex or in whole brain. The histochemical assay of mitochondrial complex IV in the hippocampus showed decreased staining upon aging. Oxidative damage, determined as the mitochondrial content of thiobarbituric-acid reactive substances (TBARS) and protein carbonyls, increased in aged and senescent hippocampus (66-74% in TBARS and 48-96% in carbonyls). A significant statistical correlation was observed between mitochondrial oxidative damage and enzymatic activity. Mitochondrial dysfunction with shortage of energy supply is considered a likely cause of dysfunction in aged hippocampus.

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