Mitochondria are central regulators of cardiac homeostasis, integrating energy production, redox balance, calcium handling, and innate immune signaling. In cardiovascular disease (CVD), mitochondrial dysfunction acts as a unifying mechanism connecting oxidative stress, metabolic inflexibility, inflammation, and structural remodeling. Disturbances in mitochondrial quality control—encompassing fusion–fission dynamics, PINK1/Parkin- and receptor-mediated mitophagy, biogenesis, and proteostasis—compromise mitochondrial integrity and amplify cardiomyocyte injury. Excess reactive oxygen species, mitochondrial DNA release, and calcium overload further activate cGAS–STING, NLRP3 inflammasomes, and mPTP-driven cell death pathways, perpetuating maladaptive remodeling. Therapeutic strategies targeting mitochondrial dysfunction have rapidly expanded, ranging from mitochondria-targeted antioxidants (such as MitoQ and SS-31), nutraceuticals, metabolic modulators (SGLT2 inhibitors, metformin), and mitophagy or biogenesis activators to innovative approaches including mtDNA editing, nanocarrier-based delivery, and mitochondrial transplantation. These interventions aim to restore organelle structure, improve bioenergetics, and reestablish balanced quality control networks. This review integrates recent mechanistic insights with emerging translational evidence, outlining how mitochondria function as bioenergetic and inflammatory hubs in CVD. By synthesizing established and next-generation therapeutic strategies, it highlights the potential of precision mitochondrial medicine to reshape the future management of cardiovascular disease.

Mitochondria at the Crossroads of Cardiovascular Disease: Mechanistic Drivers and Emerging Therapeutic Strategies / Alia, Sonila; Pedriali, Gaia; Compagnucci, Paolo; Valeri, Yari; Membrino, Valentina; Di Crescenzo, Tiziana; Tremoli, Elena; Mazzanti, Laura; Vignini, Arianna; Pinton, Paolo; Casella, Michela. - In: CELLS. - ISSN 2073-4409. - 15:4(2026). [10.3390/cells15040372]

Mitochondria at the Crossroads of Cardiovascular Disease: Mechanistic Drivers and Emerging Therapeutic Strategies

Alia, Sonila;Compagnucci, Paolo;Valeri, Yari;Membrino, Valentina;Di Crescenzo, Tiziana;Vignini, Arianna;Casella, Michela
2026-01-01

Abstract

Mitochondria are central regulators of cardiac homeostasis, integrating energy production, redox balance, calcium handling, and innate immune signaling. In cardiovascular disease (CVD), mitochondrial dysfunction acts as a unifying mechanism connecting oxidative stress, metabolic inflexibility, inflammation, and structural remodeling. Disturbances in mitochondrial quality control—encompassing fusion–fission dynamics, PINK1/Parkin- and receptor-mediated mitophagy, biogenesis, and proteostasis—compromise mitochondrial integrity and amplify cardiomyocyte injury. Excess reactive oxygen species, mitochondrial DNA release, and calcium overload further activate cGAS–STING, NLRP3 inflammasomes, and mPTP-driven cell death pathways, perpetuating maladaptive remodeling. Therapeutic strategies targeting mitochondrial dysfunction have rapidly expanded, ranging from mitochondria-targeted antioxidants (such as MitoQ and SS-31), nutraceuticals, metabolic modulators (SGLT2 inhibitors, metformin), and mitophagy or biogenesis activators to innovative approaches including mtDNA editing, nanocarrier-based delivery, and mitochondrial transplantation. These interventions aim to restore organelle structure, improve bioenergetics, and reestablish balanced quality control networks. This review integrates recent mechanistic insights with emerging translational evidence, outlining how mitochondria function as bioenergetic and inflammatory hubs in CVD. By synthesizing established and next-generation therapeutic strategies, it highlights the potential of precision mitochondrial medicine to reshape the future management of cardiovascular disease.
2026
cardiovascular disease; inflammation; mitochondrial dysfunction; mitochondrial quality control; mitochondrial signaling; mitophagy; oxidative stress
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11566/354455
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