Publication | Open Access
Age-associated decline of MondoA drives cellular senescence through impaired autophagy and mitochondrial homeostasis
70
Citations
66
References
2022
Year
BiologyMondoa Knockout MiceMitophagyCell AutophagyAgingLongevityMitochondrial HomeostasisPhysiologyAutophagyMondoa Worsens SenescenceMedicineAge-associated DeclineCellular SenescenceBiogerontologyImpaired AutophagyCell BiologyOxidative Stress
Accumulation of senescent cells affects organismal aging and the prevalence of age-associated disease. Emerging evidence suggests that activation of autophagy protects against age-associated diseases and promotes longevity, but the roles and regulatory mechanisms of autophagy in cellular senescence are not well understood. Here, we identify the transcription factor, MondoA, as a regulator of cellular senescence, autophagy, and mitochondrial homeostasis. MondoA protects against cellular senescence by activating autophagy partly through the suppression of an autophagy-negative regulator, Rubicon. In addition, we identify peroxiredoxin 3 (Prdx3) as another downstream regulator of MondoA essential for mitochondrial homeostasis and autophagy. Rubicon and Prdx3 work independently to regulate senescence. Furthermore, we find that MondoA knockout mice have exacerbated senescence during ischemic acute kidney injury (AKI), and a decrease of MondoA in the nucleus is correlated with human aging and ischemic AKI. Our results suggest that decline of MondoA worsens senescence and age-associated disease.
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