S'identifier

Mitochondria are eukaryotic cellular organelles that are known to produce energy through a process called oxidative phosphorylation. Besides their primary function, mitochondria are involved in various cellular processes, including cell growth, differentiation, signaling, metabolism, and senescence. Age-related changes cause a decline in mitochondrial quality and integrity due to increased mitochondrial mutations and oxidative damage. Thus, aging can severely impact mitochondrial functions, leading to abnormal cell processes.

Mitochondria are known for their structural plasticity and undergo fission or fusion depending on specific cellular processes. For instance, mitochondrial fission is associated with mitophagy, a regulatory process that specifically removes damaged mitochondria, thus maintaining tissue homeostasis. However, aging can cause loss or mutation in proteins involved in mitochondrial fission. This eventually impairs mitophagy, a condition often correlated with several age-related diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, cardiomyopathies, and cancer.

In another critical function, mitochondria associates with the cytoskeleton to facilitate their own mobility. It is a crucial factor that enables the distribution of mitochondria across cytoplasms in cells with a complex structure such as neurons. However, in aging cells, the cytoskeleton can become unstable, decreasing the mitochondrial movement and leading to abnormal neuronal functions.

Energy production through respiration is the fundamental function of the mitochondria. The mitochondrial respiratory chains generate superoxide radicals as a toxic byproduct. The mitochondrial antioxidant system typically neutralizes these radicals. However, the aging mitochondria have decreased antioxidant capacity and cannot combat the oxidative stress from the superoxide radicals. This results in the accumulation of reactive oxygen species in the cell that eventually cause cell death.

Tags
MitochondriaCellular RespirationEnergy ProductionATP SynthesisOrganellesOxidative PhosphorylationMetabolic ProcessesCell BiologyMitochondrial DNABioenergetics

Du chapitre 5:

article

Now Playing

5.11 : Mitochondria

Cells and their Components

8.8K Vues

article

5.1 : Que sont les cellules ?

Cells and their Components

1.7K Vues

article

5.2 : Diversité cellulaire

Cells and their Components

2.7K Vues

article

5.3 : Cytoplasme

Cells and their Components

1.5K Vues

article

5.4 : Le Noyau

Cells and their Components

1.2K Vues

article

5.5 : Le nucléosome

Cells and their Components

1.2K Vues

article

5.6 : La particule du noyau du nucléosome

Cells and their Components

791 Vues

article

5.7 : Emballage de la chromatine

Cells and their Components

16.4K Vues

article

5.8 : Le réticulum endoplasmique

Cells and their Components

1.4K Vues

article

5.9 : Appareil de Golgi

Cells and their Components

1.8K Vues

article

5.10 : Lysosomes

Cells and their Components

1.5K Vues

article

5.12 : Membranes mitochondriales

Cells and their Components

926 Vues

article

5.13 : Peroxysomes

Cells and their Components

817 Vues

article

5.14 : Ribosomes

Cells and their Components

1.5K Vues

article

5.15 : La structure du protéasome

Cells and their Components

615 Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.