Institute of Health Sciences
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Browsing Institute of Health Sciences by Subject "Autophagy"
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Item Exploring the role of NAD metabolism in response to mitochondrial respiratory chain inhibitionMukherjee, PiyaliMitochondrial Complex I deficiency has been reported in several diseases and strongly linked to patients with Parkinson ’s disease. However, there is poor mechanistic understanding of the pathways involved and no treatment regimen is currently available for mitochondrial complex I deficiency disorders. Rotenone is a potent inhibitor of mitochondrial ETC complex I. Several studies have indicated that rotenone-mediated cell death is associated with mitochondrial depolarization, DNA damage, and ROS generation that corroborates with similar observations in other mitochondrial complex I deficiency disorders but there lacks a comprehensive understanding of the cell death network induced by the deregulation of these pathways. Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is an essential metabolite that bridges mitochondrial energy production with metabolism. However, how NAD+ modulates cellular homeostasis in response to mitochondrial respiratory chain inhibition has not been comprehensively explored so far. This study focuses on understanding the events that lead to NAD+-dependent cell death following mitochondrial complex I inhibition. Our study revealed that early loss of endogenous NAD+ due to hyperactivation of PARP1 in the presence of rotenone may act as a ‘biological trigger’ of NADase Sarm1 activation in the presence of mitochondrial complex I inhibitor rotenone. This study demonstrated, replenishing NAD+ levels by PARP1 inhibitor, PJ34/Olaparib restored mitochondrial complex I activity, and early loss of NAD+, thereby preventing the activation of Sarm1. This conservation of NAD+ via PARP inhibition stimulated mitophagy and removal of damaged mitochondria, thereby preventing sustained ROS production. These cellular data were further validated in Drosophila melanogaster (w1118) where a significant reduction in rotenone-induced loss of locomotor abilities, reduced inflammatory response, restoration of dopaminergic neuronal loss, and reduced dSarm expression was observed in flies following PARP inhibition via the clinical inhibitor, Olaparib. Collectively, these observations not only uncover a novel regulation of cell death via endogenous NAD+ levels but also point towards an important understanding of how PARP inhibitors could be repurposed in the treatment of mitochondrial complex I deficiency disorders.