Melatonin modulates neuronal mitochondria function during normal ageing in mice

2017 
Mitochondrial dysfunction has been shown to be associated with normal ageing and may account for age-related vulnerability to disease. The increasing number of old people worldwide has created the need to find effective therapeutic agents to reduce the incidence of age-related disease. In the current report, we carried out an assessment of mitochondrial function in established young, middle-aged and old synaptosomal mitochondria bearing cybrids without or with melatonin treatment. The cybrids were generated by transferring isolated mitochondria from synaptosomes of brain cortical cells in mice to rho-zero mtDNA-less cells. In galactose media, a selective media that tests a cells ability to produce ATP through the electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation, 500µM melatonin (N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine) raised cell viability in young and middle-aged cybrids (P 0.05), but increased significantly in the middle-aged and old cybrids (P<0.05) with melatonin treatment. Light and fluorescence microscopy showed observable structural damage and cell death in the middle-aged and old cybrids without melatonin treatment. The results suggest that melatonin may be a potent therapeutic intervention during age-related neuronal mitochondrial dysfunction.
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