| Literature DB >> 26249642 |
Yongbo Li1, Satoshi Honda1, Kentaro Iwami1, Yoshihiro Ohta2, Norihiro Umeda1.
Abstract
The cells in the cardiovascular system are constantly subjected to mechanical forces created by blood flow and the beating heart. The effect of forces on cells has been extensively investigated, but their effect on cellular organelles such as mitochondria remains unclear. We examined the impact of nano-Newton forces on mitochondria using a bent optical fibre (BOF) with a flat-ended tip (diameter exceeding 2 μm) and a confocal fluorescence microscope. By indenting a single mitochondrion with the BOF tip, we found that the mitochondrial elastic modulus was proportional to the (-1/2) power of the mitochondrial radius in the 9.6-115 kPa range. We stained the mitochondria with a potential-metric dye (TMRE) and measured the changes in TMRE fluorescence intensity. We confirmed that more active mitochondria exhibit a higher frequency of repetitive transient depolarization. The same trend was observed at forces lower than 50 nN. We further showed that the depolarization frequency of mitochondria decreases under an extremely large force (nearly 100 nN). We conclude that mitochondrial function is affected by physical environmental factors, such as external forces at the nano-Newton level.Keywords: Bent optical fibre; CLSM; confocal fluorescence microscope; elastic moduli; flat-ended tip; mitochondria; mitochondrial activity
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26249642 DOI: 10.1111/jmi.12277
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Microsc ISSN: 0022-2720 Impact factor: 1.758