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Review
. 2020 Dec:192:111385.
doi: 10.1016/j.mad.2020.111385. Epub 2020 Oct 28.

Mitochondria and cellular redox state on the route from ageing to Alzheimer's disease

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Review

Mitochondria and cellular redox state on the route from ageing to Alzheimer's disease

G Abate et al. Mech Ageing Dev. 2020 Dec.

Abstract

Several theories have been postulated, trying to explain why and how living organisms age. Despite some controversies and still huge open questions, a growing body of evidence suggest alterations of mitochondrial functionality and redox-homeostasis occur during the ageing process. Oxidative damage and mitochondrial dysfunction do not represent the cause of ageing per se but they have to be analyzed within the complexity of those series of processes occurring during lifespan. The establishment of a crosstalk among them is a shared common feature of many chronic age-related diseases, including neurodegenerative disorders, for which ageing is a major risk factor. The challenge is to understand when and how the interplay between these two systems move towards from normal ageing process to a pathological phenotype. Here in this review, we discuss the crosstalk between mitochondria and cytosolic-ROS. Furthermore, through a visual data mining approach, we attempt to describe the dynamic interplay between mitochondria and cellular redox state on the route from ageing to an AD phenotype.

Keywords: Ageing; Alzheimer’s disease; Mitochondrion; Redox homeostasis; Threshold.

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