Runaway Mitochondria Cause Telomere Damage in Cells
8/26/2019
“I like to call it ‘the Chernobyl effect’ — you’ve turned the reactor on and now you can’t turn it off,” said senior author Bennett Van Houten, Ph.D., professor of pharmacology and chemical biology at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and UPMC Hillman Cancer Center. “You have this clean-burning machine that’s now polluting like mad, and that pollution feeds back and hurts electron transport function. It’s a vicious cycle.”
At this point, the nucleus of the cell is being pummeled by free radicals. It shrinks and contorts. The cell stops dividing. Yet, the DNA seems oddly intact.
Other authors on the study include Wei Qian, Ph.D., Namrata Kumar, Vera Roginskaya, Elise Fouquerel, Ph.D., and Shruti Shiva, Ph.D., of Pitt; and Dmytro Kolodieznyi and Marcel Bruchez, Ph.D., of Carnegie Mellon University.
VIDEO INFO:
CREDIT: Tim Betler/UPMC
CAPTION: Cellular Chernobyl: Oxidative stress damage to mitochondria kicks off a chain reaction that spews pollutants into the cell, shortens telomeres and leads to premature aging.
CREDIT: Qian et al. (2019), PNAS
CAPTION: Mitochondria Meltdown Pummels Cell Nuclei
Reactive oxygen species pumped out by damaged mitochondria cause cell nuclei to oxidize and shrivel. Nuclei are labeled in blue and oxidized nuclear proteins in yellow.
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