Abstract

Inhibition of proteasome activity occurs in normal aging and in a wide variety of neurodegenerative conditions including Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease. Although each of these conditions is also associated with mitochondrial dysfunction potentially mediated by proteasome inhibition, the relationship between proteasome inhibition and the loss of mitochondrial homeostasis in each of these conditions has not been fully elucidated. In this study, we conducted experimentation in order to begin to develop a more complete understanding of the effects proteasome inhibition has on neural mitochondrial homeostasis. Mitochondria within neural SH-SY5Y cells exposed to low level proteasome inhibition possessed similar morphological features and similar rates of electron transport chain activity under basal conditions as compared with untreated neural cultures of equal passage number. Despite such similarities, maximal complex I and complex II activities were dramatically reduced in neural cells subject to proteasome inhibition. Proteasome inhibition also increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production, reduced intramitochondrial protein translation, and increased cellular dependence on glycolysis. Finally, whereas proteasome inhibition generated cells that consistently possessed mitochondria located in close proximity to lysosomes with mitochondria present in the cellular debris located within autophagosomes, increased levels of lipofuscin suggest that impairments in mitochondrial turnover may occur following proteasome inhibition. Taken together, these data demonstrate that proteasome inhibition dramatically alters specific aspects of neural mitochondrial homeostasis and alters lysosomal-mediated degradation of mitochondria with both of these alterations potentially contributing to aging and age-related disease in the nervous system.

Highlights

  • To survive, cells must continually generate energy through either the mitochondria-dependent mechanisms or mitochondrial-independent mechanisms such as glycolysis

  • Our results demonstrate that mitochondria isolated from clone 6 cells have a reduced electron transport system (ETS) reserve as indicated by reduced oxygen consumption when the ETS is uncoupled from the ATP synthase, a commonly utilized measure of maximum ETS oxygen consumption [26, 27]

  • These data indicate that a loss of complex activity most probably has occurred downstream of complex I because even when it is bypassed by using complex II substrates, respiration is still impaired in mitochondria from cells undergoing inhibition of proteasome activity

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Summary

Introduction

Cells must continually generate energy through either the mitochondria-dependent mechanisms or mitochondrial-independent mechanisms such as glycolysis. Numerous neurodegenerative conditions associated with mitochondria dysfunction are known to have significant cells that consistently possessed mitochondria located in close proximity to lysosomes with mitochondria present in the cellular debris located within autophagosomes, increased levels of lipofuscin suggest that impairments in mitochondrial turnover may occur following proteasome inhibition.

Results
Conclusion
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