Title of article :
Unraveling Pathophysiological Link Between Mitophagy Pathway and Vascular Dementia
Author/Authors :
Kumas-Kulualp ، Meltem Department of Histology and Embryology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Dokuz Eylul University , Kadirhan ، Ozge Altintas Department of Neurology - Faculty of Medicine - Kirklareli University , Demirci ، Mehmet Department of Medical Microbiology - Faculty of Medicine - Kirklareli University
From page :
1
To page :
8
Abstract :
Context: Vascular dementia (VaD) is the second most common type of dementia after Alzheimer’s disease worldwide. Vascular dementia is a neurodegenerative disorder characterizedby gradual cognitive impairment. Ischemicandhemorrhagic strokes result in VaD, markedly distributing cerebral blood flow and decreasing patients’ cognitive and memory performance. Due to their high energy demands, neurons are more sensitive to cellular architecture changes and exposed to mitochondrial stress than other cell types. Mitochondrial dysfunction and selective autophagy of mitochondria, known as mitophagy, are associated with VaD. This review aims to elucidate the association between mitophagy and VaD. Evidence Acquisition: This review was conducted independently by at least two researchers dominant in various VaD studies. We searched databases including Elsevier, Google Scholar, and PubMed using the terms ‘vascular dementia’, ‘vascular cognitive impairment’, and ‘mitophagy’.We evaluated 70 articlesonthe relationship between VaDand mitophagy and interpreted the results. Adobe Photoshop 2022 was used for drawing figures by researchers. Results: The autophagy process plays a protective role in experimental VaD models via preserving vascular integrity and the structure of the blood-brain barrier, upregulating occludin and claudin protein expressions, reducing oxidative stress, and decreasing cognitive dysfunction. Some studies claim that autophagy could have adverse effects in a time-dependent manner against neuronal injury. Prolonged autophagy and overexpressed autophagic proteins induce ischemic injury and cause neuronal cells to undergo apoptotic cell death. Conclusions: Although there are limited studies on the activation of mitophagy-related pathways in VaD, and the definitive role of mitophagy in neuronal healing is unclear, further research is needed to elucidate mitophagy pathways in neurons.
Keywords :
Vascular Dementia , Autophagy , Neurodegeneration , Mitophagy
Journal title :
Archives of Neuroscience
Journal title :
Archives of Neuroscience
Record number :
2745916
Link To Document :
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