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Mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians

Mitochondria have been considered for long time as important determinants of cell aging because of their role in the production of reactive oxygen species. In this study we investigated the impact of mitochondrial metabolism and biology as determinants of successful aging in primary cultures of fibr...

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Autores principales: Sgarbi, Gianluca, Matarrese, Paola, Pinti, Marcello, Lanzarini, Catia, Ascione, Barbara, Gibellini, Lara, Dika, Emi, Patrizi, Annalisa, Tommasino, Chiara, Capri, Miriam, Cossarizza, Andrea, Baracca, Alessandra, Lenaz, Giorgio, Solaini, Giancarlo, Franceschi, Claudio, Malorni, Walter, Salvioli, Stefano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4032796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24799450
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author Sgarbi, Gianluca
Matarrese, Paola
Pinti, Marcello
Lanzarini, Catia
Ascione, Barbara
Gibellini, Lara
Dika, Emi
Patrizi, Annalisa
Tommasino, Chiara
Capri, Miriam
Cossarizza, Andrea
Baracca, Alessandra
Lenaz, Giorgio
Solaini, Giancarlo
Franceschi, Claudio
Malorni, Walter
Salvioli, Stefano
author_facet Sgarbi, Gianluca
Matarrese, Paola
Pinti, Marcello
Lanzarini, Catia
Ascione, Barbara
Gibellini, Lara
Dika, Emi
Patrizi, Annalisa
Tommasino, Chiara
Capri, Miriam
Cossarizza, Andrea
Baracca, Alessandra
Lenaz, Giorgio
Solaini, Giancarlo
Franceschi, Claudio
Malorni, Walter
Salvioli, Stefano
author_sort Sgarbi, Gianluca
collection PubMed
description Mitochondria have been considered for long time as important determinants of cell aging because of their role in the production of reactive oxygen species. In this study we investigated the impact of mitochondrial metabolism and biology as determinants of successful aging in primary cultures of fibroblasts isolated from the skin of long living individuals (LLI) (about 100 years old) compared with those from young (about 27 years old) and old (about 75 years old) subjects. We observed that fibroblasts from LLI displayed significantly lower complex I-driven ATP synthesis and higher production of H(2)O(2) in comparison with old subjects. Despite these changes, bioenergetics of these cells appeared to operate normally. This lack of functional consequences was likely due to a compensatory phenomenon at the level of mitochondria, which displayed a maintained supercomplexes organization and an increased mass. This appears to be due to a decreased mitophagy, induced by hyperfused, elongated mitochondria. The overall data indicate that longevity is characterized by a preserved bioenergetic function likely attained by a successful mitochondria remodeling that can compensate for functional defects through an increase in mass, i.e. a sort of mitochondrial “hypertrophy”.
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spelling pubmed-40327962014-06-02 Mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians Sgarbi, Gianluca Matarrese, Paola Pinti, Marcello Lanzarini, Catia Ascione, Barbara Gibellini, Lara Dika, Emi Patrizi, Annalisa Tommasino, Chiara Capri, Miriam Cossarizza, Andrea Baracca, Alessandra Lenaz, Giorgio Solaini, Giancarlo Franceschi, Claudio Malorni, Walter Salvioli, Stefano Aging (Albany NY) Research Paper Mitochondria have been considered for long time as important determinants of cell aging because of their role in the production of reactive oxygen species. In this study we investigated the impact of mitochondrial metabolism and biology as determinants of successful aging in primary cultures of fibroblasts isolated from the skin of long living individuals (LLI) (about 100 years old) compared with those from young (about 27 years old) and old (about 75 years old) subjects. We observed that fibroblasts from LLI displayed significantly lower complex I-driven ATP synthesis and higher production of H(2)O(2) in comparison with old subjects. Despite these changes, bioenergetics of these cells appeared to operate normally. This lack of functional consequences was likely due to a compensatory phenomenon at the level of mitochondria, which displayed a maintained supercomplexes organization and an increased mass. This appears to be due to a decreased mitophagy, induced by hyperfused, elongated mitochondria. The overall data indicate that longevity is characterized by a preserved bioenergetic function likely attained by a successful mitochondria remodeling that can compensate for functional defects through an increase in mass, i.e. a sort of mitochondrial “hypertrophy”. Impact Journals LLC 2014-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4032796/ /pubmed/24799450 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Sgarbi et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
spellingShingle Research Paper
Sgarbi, Gianluca
Matarrese, Paola
Pinti, Marcello
Lanzarini, Catia
Ascione, Barbara
Gibellini, Lara
Dika, Emi
Patrizi, Annalisa
Tommasino, Chiara
Capri, Miriam
Cossarizza, Andrea
Baracca, Alessandra
Lenaz, Giorgio
Solaini, Giancarlo
Franceschi, Claudio
Malorni, Walter
Salvioli, Stefano
Mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians
title Mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians
title_full Mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians
title_fullStr Mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians
title_full_unstemmed Mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians
title_short Mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians
title_sort mitochondria hyperfusion and elevated autophagic activity are key mechanisms for cellular bioenergetic preservation in centenarians
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4032796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24799450
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