4.7 Article

Targeting mitochondrial impairment for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases: From hypertension to ischemia-reperfusion injury, searching for new pharmacological targets

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BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
卷 208, 期 -, 页码 -

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bcp.2022.115405

关键词

Hypertension; Ischemia reperfusion injury; Cardiovascular diseases; Mitochondrial diseases; Mitochondrial targets for CVD treatments; Mitochondrial carriers; Mitochondrial permeability transition pore; Molecular modeling of mitochondrial proteins; Drug-Repurposing; Mitochondrial dynamics; Mitochondrial pharmacological targets; Mitochondrial dysfunction; Cardiolipin; Respiratory chain; Voltage-dependent anion channels; Mitochondrial pyruvate carrier; Aquaporin; Genomics; Transcriptomics; Metabolomics; Mitochondrial metabolite transport system; Mitochondrial impairment

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Mitochondria and mitochondrial proteins are promising pharmacological target candidates for the prevention of hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. Targeting mitochondrial dysfunction in cardiomyocytes can prevent heart failure. Advances in omics approaches and computational methods allow for detailed investigation of impaired mitochondrial pathways in CVDs and the design of new selective drugs.
Mitochondria and mitochondrial proteins represent a group of promising pharmacological target candidates in the search of new molecular targets and drugs to counteract the onset of hypertension and more in general cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Indeed, several mitochondrial pathways result impaired in CVDs, showing ATP depletion and ROS production as common traits of cardiac tissue degeneration. Thus, targeting mitochondrial dysfunction in cardiomyocytes can represent a successful strategy to prevent heart failure. In this context, the identification of new pharmacological targets among mitochondrial proteins paves the way for the design of new selective drugs. Thanks to the advances in omics approaches, to a greater availability of mitochondrial crys-tallized protein structures and to the development of new computational approaches for protein 3D-modelling and drug design, it is now possible to investigate in detail impaired mitochondrial pathways in CVDs. Furthermore, it is possible to design new powerful drugs able to hit the selected pharmacological targets in a highly selective way to rescue mitochondrial dysfunction and prevent cardiac tissue degeneration. The role of mitochondrial dysfunction in the onset of CVDs appears increasingly evident, as reflected by the impairment of proteins involved in lipid peroxidation, mitochondrial dynamics, respiratory chain complexes, and membrane polarization maintenance in CVD patients. Conversely, little is known about proteins responsible for the cross-talk between mitochondria and cytoplasm in cardiomyocytes. Mitochondrial transporters of the SLC25A fam-ily, in particular, are responsible for the translocation of nucleotides (e.g., ATP), amino acids (e.g., aspartate, glutamate, ornithine), organic acids (e.g. malate and 2-oxoglutarate), and other cofactors (e.g., inorganic phosphate, NAD+, FAD, carnitine, CoA derivatives) between the mitochondrial and cytosolic compartments. Thus, mitochondrial transporters play a key role in the mitochondria-cytosol cross-talk by leading metabolic pathways such as the malate/aspartate shuttle, the carnitine shuttle, the ATP export from mitochondria, and the regulation of permeability transition pore opening. Since all these pathways are crucial for maintaining healthy cardiomyocytes, mitochondrial carriers emerge as an interesting class of new possible pharmacological targets for CVD treatments.

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