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Initial brain aging: heterogeneity of mitochondrial size is associated with decline in complex I-linked respiration in cortex and hippocampus

Kirsten Thomsen, Takashi Yokota, Md Mahdi Hasan-Olive, Niloofar Sherazi, Nima Borhan Fakouri, Claus Desler, Christine Elisabeth Regnell, Steen Larsen, Lene Juel Rasmussen, Flemming Dela, Linda Hildegard Bergersen, Martin Lauritzen

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Brain aging is accompanied by declining mitochondrial respiration. We hypothesized that mitochondrial morphology and dynamics would reflect this decline. Using hippocampus and frontal cortex of a segmental progeroid mouse model lacking Cockayne syndrome protein B (CSB(m/m)) and C57Bl/6 (WT) controls and comparing young (2-5 months) to middle-aged mice (13-14 months), we found that complex I-linked state 3 respiration (CI) was reduced at middle age in CSB(m/m) hippocampus, but not in CSB(m/m) cortex or WT brain. In hippocampus of both genotypes, mitochondrial size heterogeneity increased with age. Notably, an inverse correlation between heterogeneity and CI was found in both genotypes, indicating that heterogeneity reflects mitochondrial dysfunction. The ratio between fission and fusion gene expression reflected age-related alterations in mitochondrial morphology but not heterogeneity. Mitochondrial DNA content was lower, and hypoxia-induced factor 1α mRNA was greater at both ages in CSB(m/m) compared to WT brain. Our findings show that decreased CI and increased mitochondrial size heterogeneity are highly associated and point to declining mitochondrial quality control as an initial event in brain aging.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNeurobiology of Aging
Volume61
Pages (from-to)215-224
ISSN0197-4580
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2018

Keywords

  • Journal Article

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