δ-opioid receptor activation protects against Parkinson’s disease-related mitochondrial dysfunction by enhancing PINK1/Parkin-dependent mitophagy
Author(s) -
Yuan Xu,
Feng Zhi,
Jiahao Mao,
Ya Peng,
Nan Shao,
Gianfranco Balboni,
Yilin Yang,
Ying Xia
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.103970
Subject(s) - pink1 , mitophagy , parkin , mitochondrion , neuroprotection , microbiology and biotechnology , gene knockdown , chemistry , pharmacology , autophagy , biology , parkinson's disease , apoptosis , medicine , biochemistry , disease
Our previous studies have shown that the δ-opioid receptor (DOR) is an important neuroprotector via the regulation of PTEN-induced kinase 1 (PINK1), a mitochondria-related molecule, under hypoxic and MPP + insults. Since mitochondrial dysfunctions are observed in both hypoxia and MPP + insults, this study further investigated whether DOR is cytoprotective against these insults by targeting mitochondria. Through comparing DOR-induced responses to hypoxia versus MPP + -induced parkinsonian insult in PC12 cells, we found that both hypoxia and MPP + caused a collapse of mitochondrial membrane potential and severe mitochondrial dysfunction. In sharp contrast to its inappreciable effect on mitochondria in hypoxic conditions, DOR activation with UFP-512, a specific agonist, significantly attenuated the MPP + -induced mitochondrial injury. Mechanistically, DOR activation effectively upregulated PINK1 expression and promoted Parkin's mitochondrial translocation and modification, thus enhancing the PINK1-Parkin mediated mitophagy. Either PINK1 knockdown or DOR knockdown largely interfered with the DOR-mediated mitoprotection in MPP + conditions. Moreover, there was a major difference between hypoxia versus MPP + in terms of the regulation of mitophagy with hypoxia-induced mitophagy being independent from DOR-PINK1 signaling. Taken together, our novel data suggest that DOR activation is neuroprotective against parkinsonian injury by specifically promoting mitophagy in a PINK1-dependent pathway and thus attenuating mitochondrial damage.
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