4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Glycoxidative stress-induced mitophagy modeulates mitochondrial fates

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出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2010.05630.x

关键词

N-epsilon-(carboxymethyl) lysine; reactive oxygen species; mitochondria] morphology; mitophagy I

资金

  1. National Science Council of the Republic of China [NSC95-2320-B-038-026, NSC 98-3112-B-038-001]

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Diabetes mellitus (DM), a state of chronic hyperglycemia, is associated with a variety of serious complications. Hyperglycemia-induced advanced glycation end products (AGEs) play an important role in the development of diabetic complications. In vivo, we demonstrated that disrupted mitochondria and autophagy was elevated in type II DM db/db mice. Mitophagy was evidenced by increased autophagosome formation in the 13-islet cells. The adducts of N-epsilon-(carboxymethyl) lysine (CML), a major AGE, and bovine serum albumin (CM L-BSA) stimulated the conversion of microtubule-associated protein I light chain 3-I (LC3-I) to LC3-II in rat insulinoma cells (RIN-m5F). CML-BSA increased ROS generation as demonstrated in a time-dependent manner. Experiments with mitochondrial targeted enhanced yellow fluorescent protein transfected RIN-m5F cells, massive fragmented mitochondria were visualized in the CML-BSA treated cells. Taken together, these data suggested that AGEs may cause mitochondrial dysfunction and mitophagosome formation, and AGEs-induced glycoxidative stress may trigger mitophagic process to modulate mitochondrial fates leading to either cell survival or cell death.

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