Publication:
Reduced expression of mitochondrial complex I subunit Ndufs2 does not impact healthspan in mice.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2022-03-25

Authors

McElroy, Gregory S
Chakrabarty, Ram P
D'Alessandro, Karis B
Hu, Yuan-Shih
Vasan, Karthik
Tan, Jerica
Stoolman, Joshua S
Weinberg, Samuel E
Steinert, Elizabeth M
Reyfman, Paul A

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Aging in mammals leads to reduction in genes encoding the 45-subunit mitochondrial electron transport chain complex I. It has been hypothesized that normal aging and age-related diseases such as Parkinson's disease are in part due to modest decrease in expression of mitochondrial complex I subunits. By contrast, diminishing expression of mitochondrial complex I genes in lower organisms increases lifespan. Furthermore, metformin, a putative complex I inhibitor, increases healthspan in mice and humans. In the present study, we investigated whether loss of one allele of Ndufs2, the catalytic subunit of mitochondrial complex I, impacts healthspan and lifespan in mice. Our results indicate that Ndufs2 hemizygous mice (Ndufs2+/-) show no overt impairment in aging-related motor function, learning, tissue histology, organismal metabolism, or sensitivity to metformin in a C57BL6/J background. Despite a significant reduction of Ndufs2 mRNA, the mice do not demonstrate a significant decrease in complex I function. However, there are detectable transcriptomic changes in individual cell types and tissues due to loss of one allele of Ndufs2. Our data indicate that a 50% decline in mRNA of the core mitochondrial complex I subunit Ndufs2 is neither beneficial nor detrimental to healthspan.

Description

MeSH Terms

Animals
Electron Transport Complex I
Mammals
Metformin
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Mitochondria
NADH Dehydrogenase
RNA, Messenger

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

Citation