BNIP3L/NIX-mediated mitophagy protects against ischemic brain injury independent of PARK2

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Abstract

Cerebral ischemia induces massive mitochondrial damage. These damaged mitochondria are cleared, thus attenuating brain injury, by mitophagy. Here, we identified the involvement of BNIP3L/NIX in cerebral ischemia-reperfusion (I-R)-induced mitophagy. Bnip3l knockout (bnip3l−/−) impaired mitophagy and aggravated cerebral I-R injury in mice, which can be rescued by BNIP3L overexpression. The rescuing effects of BNIP3L overexpression can be observed in park2−/− mice, which showed mitophagy deficiency after I-R. Interestingly, bnip3l and park2 double-knockout mice showed a synergistic mitophagy deficiency with I-R treatment, which further highlighted the roles of BNIP3L-mediated mitophagy as being independent from PARK2. Further experiments indicated that phosphorylation of BNIP3L serine 81 is critical for BNIP3L-mediated mitophagy. Nonphosphorylatable mutant BNIP3LS81A failed to counteract both mitophagy impairment and neuroprotective effects in bnip3l−/− mice. Our findings offer insights into mitochondrial quality control in ischemic stroke and bring forth the concept that BNIP3L could be a potential therapeutic target for ischemic stroke, beyond its accepted role in reticulocyte maturation.

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Yuan, Y., Zheng, Y., Zhang, X., Chen, Y., Wu, X., Wu, J., … Chen, Z. (2017). BNIP3L/NIX-mediated mitophagy protects against ischemic brain injury independent of PARK2. Autophagy, 13(10), 1754–1766. https://doi.org/10.1080/15548627.2017.1357792

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