The maintenance of muscle health with advancing age is dependent on mitochondrial homeostasis. While reductions in mitochondrial biogenesis have been observed with age, less is known regarding organelle degradation. Parkin is an E3 ubiquitin ligase implicated in mitophagy, but few studies have examined Parkin's contribution to mitochondrial turnover in muscle. Wild-type (WT) and Parkin knockout (KO) mice were used to delineate a role for Parkin-mediated mitochondrial degradation in aged muscle, in concurrence with exercise. Aged animals exhibited declines in muscle mass and mitochondrial content, paralleled by a nuclear environment endorsing the transcriptional repression of mitochondrial biogenesis. Mitophagic signaling was enhanced following acute endurance exercise in young WT mice but was abolished in the absence of Parkin. Basal mitophagy flux of the autophagosomal protein lipidated microtubule-associated protein 1A/1B-light chain 3 was augmented in aged animals but did not increase additionally with exercise when compared with young animals. In the absence of Parkin, exercise increased the nuclear localization of Parkin-interacting substrate, corresponding to a decrease in nuclear peroxisome proliferator gamma coactivator-1α. Remarkably, exercise enhanced mitochondrial ubiquitination in both young WT and KO animals. This suggested compensation of alternative ubiquitin ligases that were, however, unable to restore the diminished exercise-induced mitophagy in KO mice. Under basal conditions, we demonstrated that Parkin was required for mitochondrial mitofusin-2 ubiquitination. We also observed an abrogation of exercise-induced mitophagy in aged muscle. Our results demonstrate that acute exercise-induced mitophagy is dependent on Parkin and attenuated with age, which likely contributes to changes in mitochondrial content and quality in aging muscle.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.00391.2017 | DOI Listing |
iScience
November 2024
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Fujian Medical University Union Hospital, Fuzhou, P.R. China.
Irisin, an exercise-induced myokine, is known to be able to regulate bone metabolism. However, the underlying mechanisms regarding the effects of irisin on senile osteoporosis have not been fully elucidated. Here, we demonstrated that irisin can inhibit bone mass loss and bone microarchitecture alteration in senile osteoporosis mouse model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Endocrinol Metab
October 2024
Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Exercise and nutritional modulation are potent stimuli for eliciting increases in mitochondrial mass and function. Collectively, these beneficial adaptations are increasingly recognized to coincide with improvements to skeletal muscle health. Mitochondrial dynamics of fission and fusion are increasingly implicated as having a central role in mediating aspects of key organelle adaptions that are seen with exercise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFree Radic Biol Med
November 2024
Muscle Health Research Centre, Kinesiology and Health Science, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada. Electronic address:
Lysosomes play a critical role as a terminal organelle in autophagy flux and in regulating protein degradation, but their function and adaptability in skeletal muscle is understudied. Lysosome functions include both housekeeping and signaling functions essential for cellular homeostasis. This review focuses on the regulation of lysosomes in skeletal muscle during exercise, disuse, and aging, with a consideration of sex differences as well as the role of lysosomes in mediating the degradation of mitochondria, termed mitophagy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Metab
October 2024
Discipline of Physiology, School of Medicine, Ireland; Apoptosis Research Centre, University of Galway, Ireland. Electronic address:
Objectives: A decline in mitochondrial function and increased susceptibility to oxidative stress is a hallmark of ageing. Exercise endogenously generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) in skeletal muscle and promotes mitochondrial remodelling resulting in improved mitochondrial function. It is unclear how exercise induced redox signalling results in alterations in mitochondrial dynamics and morphology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
August 2024
Fralin Biomedical Research Institute, Center for Exercise Medicine Research at Virginia Tech Carilion, Roanoke, Virginia, United States.
Endurance exercise training improves exercise capacity as well as skeletal muscle and whole body metabolism, which are hallmarks of high quality-of-life and healthy aging. However, its mechanisms are not yet fully understood. Exercise-induced mitophagy has emerged as an important step in mitochondrial remodeling.
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