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Mitochondria-sequestered Aβ renders synaptic mitochondria vulnerable in the elderly with a risk of Alzheimer disease
Kun Jia, … , Russell H. Swerdlow, Heng Du
Kun Jia, … , Russell H. Swerdlow, Heng Du
Published November 22, 2023
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2023;8(22):e174290. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.174290.
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Research Article Aging Neuroscience

Mitochondria-sequestered Aβ renders synaptic mitochondria vulnerable in the elderly with a risk of Alzheimer disease

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Abstract

Mitochondria are critical for neurophysiology, and mitochondrial dysfunction constitutes a characteristic pathology in both brain aging and Alzheimer disease (AD). Whether mitochondrial deficiency in brain aging and AD is mechanistically linked, however, remains controversial. We report a correlation between intrasynaptosomal amyloid β 42 (Aβ42) and synaptic mitochondrial bioenergetics inefficiency in both aging and amnestic mild cognitive impairment, a transitional stage between normal aging and AD. Experiments using a mouse model expressing nonmutant humanized Aβ (humanized Aβ-knockin [hAβ-KI] mice) confirmed the association of increased intramitochondrial sequestration of Aβ42 with exacerbated synaptic mitochondrial dysfunction in an aging factor- and AD risk–bearing context. Also, in comparison with global cerebral Aβ, intramitochondrial Aβ was relatively preserved from activated microglial phagocytosis in aged hAβ-KI mice. The most parsimonious interpretation of our results is that aging-related mitochondrial Aβ sequestration renders synaptic mitochondrial dysfunction in the transitional stage between normal aging and AD. Mitochondrial dysfunction in both brain aging and the prodromal stage of AD may follow a continuous transition in response to escalated intraneuronal, especially intramitochondrial Aβ, accumulation. Moreover, our findings further implicate a pivotal role of mitochondria in harboring early amyloidosis during the conversion from normal to pathological aging.

Authors

Kun Jia, Jing Tian, Tienju Wang, Lan Guo, Zhenyu Xuan, Russell H. Swerdlow, Heng Du

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Figure 2

Synaptic mitochondrial bioenergetics and their correlation with synaptosomal Aβ in CU individuals and patients with aMCI.

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Synaptic mitochondrial bioenergetics and their correlation with synaptos...
(A–C) Mitochondrial CcO (A) and Cs (B) activity and CcO to Cs ratio (C) in CU and aMCI brain synaptosomal fractions. Unpaired 2-tailed t test. CU, n = 12; aMCI, n = 11. (D–F) Mitochondrial oxygen consumption in CU and aMCI synaptosomes. (D) Oxygraph generated by a Clark-type electrode. (F) Baseline oxygen consumption was recorded by inhibiting CcO activity using KCN. (E) Net oxygen consumption was calculated by subtracting baseline oxygen consumption from induced oxygen consumption. Unpaired 2-tailed t test. CU, n = 12; aMCI, n = 11. (G–I) Correlation of synaptic mitochondrial CcO activity and synaptosome Aβ42 in patients with aMCI (G), CU individuals (H), and combined individuals of the 2 groups. (I) Pearson’s correlation coefficients. CU, n = 12; aMCI, n = 11. (J) Immunogold labeling of Aβ. Arrows indicate positively stained Aβ particles. Mitochondria are showed by asterisks. Scale bar: 200 nm. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01. TMPD, N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine.

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