Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
In Search of the Holy Grail: Toward a Unified Hypothesis on Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Age-Related Diseases
Cells · 2022 · ▲ 34 citations
Abstract
Cardiolipin (CL) is a mitochondrial signature phospholipid that plays a pivotal role in mitochondrial dynamics, membrane structure, oxidative phosphorylation, mtDNA bioenergetics, and mitophagy. The depletion or abnormal acyl composition of CL causes mitochondrial dysfunction(definition), which is implicated in the pathogenesis of aging and age-related disorders. However, the molecular mechanisms by which mitochondrial dysfunction causes age-related diseases remain poorly understood. Recent development in the field has identified acyl-CoA:lysocardiolipin acyltransferase 1 (ALCAT1), an acyltransferase upregulated by oxidative stress, as a key enzyme that promotes mitochondrial dysfunction in age-related diseases. ALCAT1 catalyzes CL remodeling with very-long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, such as docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). Enrichment of DHA renders CL highly sensitive to oxidative damage by reactive oxygen species (ROS). Oxidized CL becomes a new source of ROS in the form of lipid peroxides, leading to a vicious cycle of oxidative stress, CL depletion, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Consequently, ablation or the pharmacological inhibition of ALCAT1 have been shown to mitigate obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart failure, cardiomyopathy, fatty liver diseases, neurodegenerative diseases, and cancer. The findings suggest that age-related disorders are one disease (aging) manifested by different mitochondrion-sensitive tissues, and therefore should be treated as one disease. This review will discuss a unified hypothesis on CL remodeling by ALCAT1 as the common denominator of mitochondrial dysfunction, linking mitochondrial dysfunction to the development of age-related diseases.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.3390/cells11121906
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-01 MST
Cite this
APA
Zhang, J., & Shi, Y. (2022). In Search of the Holy Grail: Toward a Unified Hypothesis on Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Age-Related Diseases. <em>Cells</em>. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11121906
Vancouver
Zhang J, Shi Y. In Search of the Holy Grail: Toward a Unified Hypothesis on Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Age-Related Diseases. Cells. 2022. doi:10.3390/cells11121906.
BibTeX
@article{jun2022InSear,
title = {In Search of the Holy Grail: Toward a Unified Hypothesis on Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Age-Related Diseases},
author = {Jun Zhang and Yuguang Shi},
journal = {Cells},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.3390/cells11121906},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Neurochemistry International 2011
Citation only
Mitochondrial dysfunction in brain aging: Role of oxidative stress and cardiolipin
Hepatology 2014
Preprint · OA
ALCAT1 controls mitochondrial etiology of fatty liver diseases, linking defective mitophagy to steatosis
Journal of Alzheimer s Disease 2017
Open access · OA
Oxidative Stress, Synaptic Dysfunction, and Alzheimer’s Disease
Current Medicinal Chemistry 2014
Citation only
Oxidative Stress Mediated Mitochondrial and Vascular Lesions as Markers in the Pathogenesis of Alzheimer Disease
Drug Design Development and Therapy 2017
Open access · CC-BY
Proteinopathy, oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction: cross talk in Alzheimer&#39;s disease and Parkinson&#39;s disease
Antioxidants 2023
Open access · CC-BY