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Home NEWS Science News Health

Aging Worsens Liver Injury via Mitochondrial Calcium

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
October 8, 2025
in Health
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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A groundbreaking study published in Cell Death Discovery reveals a novel mechanism underlying the exacerbation of liver ischemia and reperfusion injury (IRI) in aging populations. The research team led by Wu, Wang, and Zhang provides compelling evidence linking age-related aggravation of liver damage to a cascade of molecular events involving oxidized mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), macrophage pyroptosis, and acetylation-dependent calcium uptake through the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU). This discovery not only sheds light on the intricacies of liver injury but also opens up innovative pathways for therapeutic intervention in elderly patients at risk of severe hepatic damage.

Liver ischemia and reperfusion injury, a critical pathological event occurring during liver transplantation, trauma, or surgery, is characterized by an initial restriction of blood flow (ischemia) followed by the restoration of circulation (reperfusion). Although reperfusion is essential to tissue survival, it paradoxically results in exacerbated cellular damage primarily through oxidative stress and inflammation. In aging individuals, this damage is significantly intensified, but the precise molecular mechanisms remained inadequately elucidated until now. The new study addresses this knowledge gap by focusing on mitochondrial dynamics and immune cell responses that are altered due to aging.

Central to the study is the role of oxidized mitochondrial DNA released during ischemia and reperfusion. Mitochondria, the cell’s powerhouse, produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) which, when excessively generated, cause oxidative modification of mtDNA. This oxidized mtDNA, as demonstrated in the research, acts as a potent danger-associated molecular pattern (DAMP) recognized by innate immune cells such as macrophages. Macrophages, critical regulators of inflammation, respond to oxidized mtDNA accumulation by undergoing pyroptosis, a highly inflammatory form of programmed cell death that amplifies tissue damage and inflammation, perpetuating the cycle of injury.

The researchers meticulously detailed how aging promotes this harmful cascade by enhancing the acetylation of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU), a channel responsible for mitochondrial calcium uptake. Calcium homeostasis within mitochondria is vital for cellular metabolism and survival, but its dysregulation contributes to organ dysfunction. In aged livers, increased MCU acetylation was found to elevate mitochondrial calcium influx excessively, which aggravated oxidative stress and amplified mtDNA oxidation. This, in turn, intensified macrophage-mediated pyroptosis, linking calcium dysregulation to immune cell death and liver injury.

In experimental models, inhibition of MCU acetylation or blockade of mitochondrial calcium uptake significantly reduced oxidized mtDNA release and subsequent macrophage pyroptosis. This intervention not only lessened liver damage but also attenuated inflammatory responses, offering a promising strategy to mitigate IRI in aged patients. These findings implicate acetylated MCU as a potential molecular target for therapeutic development to protect against the detrimental effects of aging in liver ischemia and reperfusion contexts.

Furthermore, this study reveals an intricate interplay between mitochondrial dysfunction and immune regulation, highlighting how fundamental cellular processes are remodeled by aging to predispose organs to injury. The acetylation of MCU represents an epigenetic modification modulating mitochondrial calcium handling, emphasizing the importance of post-translational modifications in age-associated pathologies. This insight underscores the potential benefit of targeting mitochondrial regulatory mechanisms to combat fibrosis, inflammation, and organ failure linked with aging.

Importantly, the research also expands our understanding of pyroptosis beyond its established role in infectious and inflammatory diseases. By demonstrating oxidized mtDNA as a novel trigger of macrophage pyroptosis during sterile injury, the study pioneers a critical link in the pathological chain that fuels liver damage following ischemia-reperfusion events. The cascade from mitochondrial oxidative stress to immune cell death signifies a powerful amplifier of post-reperfusion inflammation that could underlie complications in liver transplantation and related clinical scenarios.

The team employed advanced molecular biology techniques, including mitochondrial calcium imaging, acetylation assays, and pyroptosis markers detection, to validate their findings across multiple experimental platforms. Their robust approach underscores the translational relevance of the mechanisms uncovered and lays a foundation for developing pharmacological agents targeting mitochondrial calcium uptake pathways. Such advancements could revolutionize the management of age-associated liver diseases, optimizing clinical outcomes for elderly transplant recipients and patients undergoing major hepatic surgeries.

Equally transformative is the implication of the study for broader organ systems where ischemia-reperfusion injury poses a significant threat, such as the heart, kidneys, and brain. Mitochondrial calcium regulation and pyroptosis are conserved pathways, suggesting these findings may have universal applicability. Consequently, research inspired by these findings could prompt investigations into cross-organ protection strategies utilizing MCU acetylation modulators or mtDNA oxidation inhibitors, potentially benefiting a wide range of ischemia-related conditions exacerbated by aging.

The insights gained from this research also align with the emerging paradigm of “inflammaging,” wherein chronic, low-grade inflammation driven by cellular and molecular aging processes contributes to degenerative diseases. The elucidation of how acetylated MCU and oxidized mtDNA orchestrate macrophage pyroptosis provides a mechanistic link between mitochondrial dysfunction and age-related inflammatory cascades. As such, targeting these pathways might not only address acute liver injury but also modulate chronic inflammation associated with aging, yielding dual therapeutic benefits.

Moreover, the findings highlight the importance of mitochondrial integrity in maintaining immune homeostasis. Age-dependent mitochondrial changes that alter calcium dynamics appear to tip the inflammatory balance toward pathological pyroptosis, reinforcing mitochondria as central hubs in the pathophysiology of aging and immune dysfunction. Therapeutic strategies restoring mitochondrial calcium balance and preventing mtDNA oxidation could thus represent a critical axis for future geriatrics-focused pharmaceutical development.

In conclusion, this study brings a pivotal piece of the aging and liver injury puzzle into focus. By demonstrating that acetylated MCU-dependent mitochondrial calcium uptake promotes oxidized mtDNA-mediated macrophage pyroptosis, which aggravates ischemia and reperfusion injury in aged livers, Wu and colleagues illuminate new therapeutic targets with far-reaching clinical implications. This discovery not only advances scientific understanding but also holds promise for improving the management of liver transplantation and other ischemia-associated diseases in elderly patients, potentially transforming outcomes in this vulnerable population.

The discovery sets the stage for future research probing the therapeutic modulation of MCU acetylation and mitochondrial calcium homeostasis. Such investigations could catalyze the development of novel pharmacologic agents designed to mitigate reperfusion injury severity and improve organ function preservation during surgery. Ultimately, this work paves the way toward an era of precision medicine where age-specific molecular interventions protect mitochondrial health and reduce inflammatory damage onset in vulnerable tissues.

This exciting breakthrough heralds a significant step forward in unraveling the complexities of aging-associated liver injury. The link between mitochondrial calcium uptake, mtDNA oxidation, and immune cell pyroptosis revealed by this research opens new horizons in biomedical science. As researchers continue to explore these pathways, there is hope that innovative treatments will soon emerge, capable of lessening the burden of ischemia-reperfusion injury and enhancing the quality of life for the aging population worldwide.

Subject of Research: Aging-related molecular mechanisms of liver ischemia and reperfusion injury involving mitochondrial calcium uptake and immune cell pyroptosis.

Article Title: Aging aggravated liver ischemia and reperfusion injury by promoting oxidized mtDNA mediated-macrophage pyroptosis through acetylated MCU-dependent calcium uptake.

Article References:
Wu, XY., Wang, R., Zhang, Q. et al. Aging aggravated liver ischemia and reperfusion injury by promoting oxidized mtDNA mediated-macrophage pyroptosis through acetylated MCU-dependent calcium uptake. Cell Death Discov. 11, 449 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41420-025-02746-9

Image Credits: AI Generated

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41420-025-02746-9

Tags: acetylation-dependent calcium uptakeage-related liver injury factorsaging and liver healthcellular damage during reperfusionimplications for liver transplantation in older adultsliver ischemia reperfusion injury mechanismsmacrophage pyroptosis in liver injurymitochondrial calcium uniporter functionmitochondrial dynamics in elderly patientsmolecular events in liver ischemianovel therapeutic interventions for liver damageoxidative stress in aging

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