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Pentacyclic triterpene oleanolic acid protects against cardiac aging through regulation of mitophagy and mitochondrial integrity
Institution:1. The Second Department of Cardiology, The Third Hospital of Nanchang, Nanchang 330009, China;2. Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Xijing Hospital, the Air Force Military Medical University, Xi''an 710032, China;3. Department of Respiration, First Affiliated Hospital of Nanchang University, Nanchang, Jiangxi 330006, China;4. Department of Cardiology, the Second Medical Center of the China PLA General Hospital, Beijing 100853, China;5. Department of Geriatrics, Xijing Hospital, the Air Force Military Medical University, Xi''an 710032, China;6. Department of Cardiology, Shanghai Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases, Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai 200032, China;7. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA
Abstract:Advanced aging exhibits altered cardiac geometry and function involving mitochondrial anomaly. Natural compounds display promises in the regulation of cardiac homeostasis via governance of mitochondrial integrity in aging. This study examined the effect of oleanolic acid (OA), a natural pentacyclic triterpenoid with free radical scavenging and P450 cyclooxygenase-regulating properties, on cardiac aging and mechanisms involved with a focus on mitophagy. Young (4–5 month-old) and old (22–24 month-old) mice were treated with OA for 6 weeks prior to assessment of cardiac function, morphology, ultrastructure, mitochondrial integrity, cell death and autophagy. Our data revealed that OA treatment alleviated aging-induced changes in myocardial remodeling (increased heart weight, chamber size, cardiomyocyte area and interstitial fibrosis), contractile function and intracellular Ca2+ handling, apoptosis, necroptosis, inflammation, autophagy and mitophagy (LC3B, p62, TOM20 and FUNDC1 but not BNIP3 and Parkin). OA treatment rescued aging-induced anomalies in mitochondrial ultrastructure (loss of myofilament alignment, swollen mitochondria, increased circularity), mitochondrial biogenesis and O2? production without any notable effect at young age. Interestingly, OA-offered benefit against cardiomyocyte aging was nullified by deletion of the mitophagy receptor FUNDC1 using FUNDC1 knockout mice, denoting an obligatory role for FUNDC1 in OA-elicited preservation of mitophagy. OA reconciled aging-induced changes in E3 ligase MARCH5 but not FBXL2, and failed to affect aging-induced rises in IP3R3. Taken together, our data indicated a beneficial role for OA in attenuating cardiac remodeling and contractile dysfunction in aging through a FUNDC1-mediated mechanism.
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