Redox Biology (Jul 2022)

Cellular redox imbalance on the crossroad between mitochondrial dysfunction, senescence, and proliferation

  • Rumiana Bakalova,
  • Ichio Aoki,
  • Zhivko Zhelev,
  • Tatsuya Higashi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53
p. 102337

Abstract

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Recent studies demonstrate that redox imbalance of NAD+/NADH and NADP+/NADPH pairs due to impaired respiration may trigger two “hidden” metabolic pathways on the crossroad between mitochondrial dysfunction, senescence, and proliferation: “β-oxidation shuttle” and “hydride transfer complex (HTC) cycle”. The “β-oxidation shuttle” induces NAD+/NADH redox imbalance in mitochondria, while HTC cycle maintains the redox balance of cytosolic NAD+/NADH, increasing the redox disbalance of NADP+/NADPH. Senescence appears to depend on high cytoplasmic NADH but low NADPH, while proliferation depends on high cytoplasmic NAD+ and NADPH that are under mitochondrial control. Thus, activating or deactivating the HTC cycle can be crucial to cell fate – senescence or proliferation. These pathways are a source of enormous cataplerosis. They support the production of large amounts of NADPH and intermediates for lipid synthesis and membrane biogenesis, as well as for DNA synthesis.