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Quinolinic acid impairs mitophagy promoting microglia senescence and poor healthspan in C. elegans: a mechanism of impaired aging process
Anjila Dongol, Xi Chen, Peng Zheng, Zehra Boz Seyhan, Xu‐Feng Huang
Biology Direct · 2023 · ▲ 21 citations
Mitochondrial dysfunction
Cellular senescence
Chronic inflammation
Disabled macroautophagy
C. elegans
Abstract
Senescent microglia are a distinct microglial phenotype present in aging brain that have been implicated in the progression of aging and age-related neurodegenerative diseases. However, the specific mechanisms that trigger microglial senescence(definition) are largely unknown. Quinolinic acid (QA) is a cytotoxic metabolite produced upon abnormal activation of microglia. Brain aging and age-related neurodegenerative diseases have an elevated concentration of QA. In the present study, we investigated whether QA promotes aging and aging-related phenotypes in microglia and C. elegans. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that QA, secreted by abnormal microglial stimulation, induces impaired mitophagy by inhibiting mitolysosome formation and consequently promotes the accumulation of damaged mitochondria due to reduced mitochondrial turnover in microglial cells. Defective mitophagy caused by QA drives microglial senescence and poor healthspan(definition) in C. elegans. Moreover, oxidative stress can mediate QA-induced mitophagy impairment and senescence in microglial cells. Importantly, we found that restoration of mitophagy by mitophagy inducer, urolithin A, prevents microglial senescence and improves healthspan in C. elegans by promoting mitolysosome formation and rescuing mitochondrial turnover inhibited by QA. Thus, our study indicates that mitolysosome formation impaired by QA is a significant aetiology underlying aging-associated changes. QA-induced mitophagy impairment plays a critical role in neuroinflammation and age-related diseases. Further, our study suggests that mitophagy inducers such as urolithin A may offer a promising anti-aging strategy for the prevention and treatment of neuroinflammation-associated brain aging diseases.
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- DOI
- 10.1186/s13062-023-00445-y
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- 2026-06-26 MST
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APA
Dongol, A., Chen, X., Zheng, P., Seyhan, Z.B., & Huang, X. (2023). Quinolinic acid impairs mitophagy promoting microglia senescence and poor healthspan in C. elegans: a mechanism of impaired aging process. <em>Biology Direct</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13062-023-00445-y
Vancouver
Dongol A, Chen X, Zheng P, Seyhan ZB, Huang X. Quinolinic acid impairs mitophagy promoting microglia senescence and poor healthspan in C. elegans: a mechanism of impaired aging process. Biology Direct. 2023. doi:10.1186/s13062-023-00445-y.
BibTeX
@article{anjila2023Quinol,
title = {Quinolinic acid impairs mitophagy promoting microglia senescence and poor healthspan in C. elegans: a mechanism of impaired aging process},
author = {Anjila Dongol and Xi Chen and Peng Zheng and Zehra Boz Seyhan and Xu‐Feng Huang},
journal = {Biology Direct},
year = {2023},
doi = {10.1186/s13062-023-00445-y},
}
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