4.6 Review

Mitochondrial dysfunction as a target in spinal cord injury: intimate correlation between pathological processes and therapeutic approaches

期刊

NEURAL REGENERATION RESEARCH
卷 18, 期 10, 页码 2161-2166

出版社

WOLTERS KLUWER MEDKNOW PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.4103/1673-5374.369094

关键词

adenosine triphosphate; axonal regeneration; creatine; mitochondria dysfunction; mitochondria; spinal cord injury

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Traumatic spinal cord injuries cause disruption of axonal projections, resulting in impaired locomotor, sensory, and autonomic functions. Mitochondrial dysfunction in the injured spinal tissue prevents the regeneration of severed axons, leading to sustained impairment in voluntary control of movement. This review discusses the link between mitochondrial dysfunction and axonal regeneration failure in spinal cord injury, and explores potential mitochondria-targeted therapeutic approaches to promote functional recovery.
Traumatic spinal cord injuries interrupt the connection of all axonal projections with their neuronal targets below and above the lesion site. This interruption results in either temporary or permanent alterations in the locomotor, sensory, and autonomic functions. Damage in the spinal tissue prevents the re-growth of severed axons across the lesion and their reconnection with neuronal targets. Therefore, the absence of spontaneous repair leads to sustained impairment in voluntary control of movement below the injury. For decades, axonal regeneration and reconnection have been considered the opitome of spinal cord injury repair with the goal being the repair of the damaged long motor and sensory tracts in a complex process that involves: (1) resealing injured axons; (2) reconstructing the cytoskeletal structure inside axons; (3) re-establishing healthy growth cones; and (4) assembling axonal cargos. These biological processes require an efficient production of adenosine triphosphate, which is affected by mitochondrial dysfunction after spinal cord injury. From a pathological standpoint, during the secondary stage of spinal cord injury, mitochondrial homeostasis is disrupted, mainly in the distal segments of severed axons. This result in a reduction of adenosine triphosphate levels and subsequent inactivation of adenosine triphosphate-dependent ion pumps required for the regulation of ion concentrations and reuptake of neurotransmitters, such as glutamate. The consequences are calcium overload, reactive oxygen species formation, and excitotoxicity. These events are intimately related to the activation of necrotic and apoptotic cell death programs, and further exacerbate the secondary stage of the injury, being a hallmark of spinal cord injury. This is why restoring mitochondrial function during the early stage of secondary injury could represent a potentially effective therapeutic intervention to overcome the motor and sensory failure produced by spinal cord injury. This review discusses the most recent evidence linking mitochondrial dysfunction with axonal regeneration failure in the context of spinal cord injury. It also covers the future of mitochondria-targeted therapeutical approaches, such as antioxidant molecules, removing mitochondrial anchor proteins, and increasing energetic metabolism through creatine treatment. These approaches are intended to enhance functional recovery by promoting axonal regeneration-reconnection after spinal cord injury.

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