| Literature DB >> 26435755 |
Akilan Palanisami1, Jie Fang2, Thomas W Lowder3, Hawley Kunz3, John H Miller2.
Abstract
Mitochondrial morphology has been associated with numerous pathologies including cancer, diabetes, obesity and heart disease. However, the connection is poorly understood-in part due to the difficulty of characterizing the morphology. This impedes the use of morphology as a tool for disease detection/monitoring. Here, we use the Brownian motion of isolated mitochondria to characterize their size and shape in a high throughput fashion. By using treadmill exercise training, mitochondria from heart and gastrocnemius of Balb/c mice were modulated in size and used to investigate the protocol. Consistent with previous reports, the heart mitochondria of untrained mice increased 5% in diameter immediately after a single bout of moderate exercise (1.091 ± 0.004 μm) as compared to completely sedentary controls (1.040 ± 0.022 μm). In addition, no change was observed in the size of gastrocnemius mitochondria (1.025 ± 0.018 μm), which was also in agreement with previous studies. The method was also successfully applied to smaller Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 26435755 PMCID: PMC4590767 DOI: 10.1039/C2AY05686K
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Methods ISSN: 1759-9660 Impact factor: 2.896