Literature DB >> 27194946

Ubisol-Q10 Prevents Glutamate-Induced Cell Death by Blocking Mitochondrial Fragmentation and Permeability Transition Pore Opening.

Santosh Kumari1, Suresh L Mehta2, Gaolin Z Milledge3, Xinyu Huang3, Haining Li4, P Andy Li5.   

Abstract

Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress are the major events that lead to the formation of mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) during glutamate-induced cytotoxicity and cell death. Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) has widely been used for the treatment of mitochondrial disorders and neurodegenerative diseases. Comparing to traditional lipid-soluble CoQ10, water soluble CoQ10 (Ubisol-Q10) has high intracellular and intra-mitochondrial distribution. The aims of the present study are to determine the neuroprotective effects of Ubisol-Q10 on glutamate-induced cell death and to explore its functional mechanisms. HT22 neuronal cells were exposed to glutamate. Cell viability was measured and mitochondrial fragmentation was assessed by mitochondrial imaging. The mPTP opening was determined by mitochondrial membrane potential and calcium retention capacity. The results revealed that the anti-glutamate toxicity effects of Ubisol-Q10 was associated with its ability to block mitochondrial fragmentation, to maintain calcium retention capacity and mitochondrial membrane potential, and to prevent mPTP formation, AIF release, and DNA fragmentation. We concluded that Ubisol-Q10 protects cells from glutamate toxicity by preserving the integrity of mitochondrial structure and function. Therefore, adequate CoQ10 supplementation may be beneficial in preventing cerebral stroke and other disorders that involve mitochondrial dysfunction.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AIF; Coenzyme Q10; calcium retention.; glutamate toxicity; mitochondrial fragmentation; neuronal cell death

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27194946      PMCID: PMC4870712          DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.13589

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Biol Sci        ISSN: 1449-2288            Impact factor:   6.580


Introduction

Mitochondrial dysfunction due to glutamate toxicity is one of the major events that accelerates neuronal cell death during acute brain injury such as ischemia/stroke, traumatic brain injury, and chronic neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer disease, Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 1. Mitochondrial dysfunction due to glutamate toxicity is mediated by receptor-initiated excitotoxicity 2, 3 and non-receptor mediated oxidative toxicity as a result of depletion of intracellular cysteine and glutathione 4. This leads to excessive accumulation of reactive oxygen species, resulting in oxidative stress 4, 5. Emerging evidence indicates that oxidative stress due to excessive generation of reactive oxygen species can affects mitochondria adversely 6. Mitochondrial dysfunction releases various factors including cytochrome c, apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF), Smac/Diablo (second mitochondria-derived activator of caspase/direct IAP binding protein with low PI), or endonuclease G which are responsible for activation of caspase-dependent or caspase-independent mechanisms of DNA degradation and cell death 7. One of the major sites of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in the cell is the mitochondria. Mitochondrial ROS is produced upon leakage of electrons through complex I (NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase) or III (ubiquinone-cytochrome c oxidoreductase) of the mitochondrial respiratory chain 8. The products of this leakage are superoxide anions and hydrogen peroxide. Superoxide is converted by the antioxidant enzyme superoxide dismutase (SOD) into hydrogen peroxide in the mitochondria (SOD2 or MnSOD) or in the cytosol (SOD1 or CuZnSOD). Hydrogen peroxide is further simplified to water by glutathione peroxidase. Oxidative stress due to depletion of antioxidant or excessive accumulation of ROS has detrimental effect on mitochondrial structure and function. Moreover, oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction are the primary events in glutamate-induced toxicity 9. Mitochondria in healthy neurons resemble long, yet remarkably dynamic filaments undergoing cycles of mitochondrial fission and fusion events. Fission processes are regulated by dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), Mitochondrial fission 1 protein (Fis1), and endophilin B1 (Endo B1); while fusion process is mediated by mitofusin-1 and -2 (Mfn1, -2) and optic atrophy 1 (OPA1) 10. Disturbance in mitochondrial dynamics toward continuous fission leads to mitochondrial fragmentation, formation of mPTP, and activation of apoptosis and neurodegeneration 11-15. Drp1, which induces mitochondrial fission, has been reported to stimulate Bid-induced Bax oligomerization and cytochrome c release by promoting tethering and hemifusion of membranes 16. Bax knockdown drastically inhibited the mitochondrial accumulation of Drp 1 and Drp1 knockdown attenuated cell apoptosis 17. Drp1/Bax activation promotes mitochondrial fragmentation, reduces mitochondrial number, and activates apoptotic cell death 18. We have recently demonstrated that glutamate exposure induces mitochondrial fragmentation 5. It is not clear whether coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) is capable of preventing mitochondrial fragmentation caused by glutamate exposure. Ubiquinone CoQ10 (coenzyme Q10, CoQ10) is a well-known electron transporter of the mitochondrial respiratory chain that shuttles electrons from complex I and II (succinate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase) to complex III during oxidative phosphorylation and energy production. It is normally synthesized in the body. However, the levels of CoQ10 decrease with genetic mutation, cancer, ageing in human and animal tissues. Whole body concentration of CoQ10 is also affected by certain drugs such as statins that inhibit the synthesis of CoQ10 in patients with a risk of cardiovascular diseases and stroke 19-21. Deficiency of CoQ10 can cause varying clinical syndromes, including encephalomyopathy, mental retardation, recurrent myoglobinuria, isolated myopathy, etc. 22-24. Supplementation of CoQ10 can restore normal mitochondrial concentration levels in aging 25-27. Available evidence suggests that besides the above essential role, CoQ10 also acts as a ubiquitous free radical scavenger and has been shown to ameliorate cell death and protects cells under various stress conditions including neurodegeneration diseases 25, 28, 29. Although, it is not clear whether the beneficial effects of CoQ10 is only limited to its antioxidant property, we and others have reported that CoQ10 prevents apoptosis activated upon mitochondrial dysfunction 29-35. Similarly, evidence of CoQ10 against glutamate-induced cell death is lacking. Therefore, in the present study we investigated whether CoQ10 curtails glutamate toxicity, prevents cell death, and offers neuroprotective role. Further, we also explored whether the beneficial effects of CoQ10 against glutamate toxicity are mediated through regulating calcium fluctuations, mPTP formation, mitochondrial membrane potential, and mitochondrial dynamic balance. Water-soluble CoQ10 (aka Ubisol-Q10) was developed to overcome low bioavailability of traditional oil-soluble CoQ10 when taken orally 36. Because traditional oil-soluble CoQ10 has a low bioavailability when taken orally, we decided to use the water soluble Q10 (aka Ubisol-Q10) for the present study. Ubisol-Q10 has better bioavailability and increases cellular and mitochondrial uptake by 20 to 30 fold over the oil-soluble formulation. In addition, it is able to pass through the Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB) 37, 38. Our data indicates that glutamate challenge induces mitochondrial dysfunction through ROS generation and mitochondrial membrane potential alteration. This further activates mitochondrial fission that results in mitochondrial fragmentation and mPTP formation. These events lead to AIF nuclear translocation, DNA fragmentation, and cell death. Ubisol-Q10 pre-treatment prevents mitochondrial dysfunction, stabilizes the mitochondrial membrane potential, blocks mPTP formation, prevents AIF nuclear translocation and nuclear DNA fragmentation, and subsequent cell death. These results clearly indicate that Ubisol-Q10 offers neuroprotective benefits partly through preserving mitochondrial dynamic balance and function and preventing apoptotic cell damage.

Materials and Methods

Cell culture, experimental treatments and viability assays

Murine hippocampal HT22 neuronal cells were cultured in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM, Invitrogen) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS), 2 mM glutamine, and 200 mM streptomycin/penicillin (Invitrogen) and maintained at 90%-95% relative humidity in 5% CO2 at 37 °C. Glutamate (Sigma) and Ubisol-Q10 (Zymes LLC) were dissolved in water. The stock solutions were diluted with cell culture medium for each experiment. Cells were subjected to glutamate stress 24 h after Ubisol-Q10 treatment. Varying concentrations (1-5 mM) of glutamate 5 and Ubisol-Q10 (10-25 µg) were tested and evaluated for cell viability after 24 h of treatment. Quantification of cell viability in HT22 cells was performed in 96-well plates with 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay. HT22 cells were seeded at a density of 10,000 cells per well. After 24 h of treatment, cells in each well were incubated with 10 μl MTT (5 mg/ml) at a final concentration of 500 μg/ml. After 2 h the medium was removed from the wells and formazan formed was dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO, 80 μl). The absorbance was read with a dual-monochromator, multi-detection microplate reader (SpectraMax M5 Molecular Device, Sunnyvale, CA) at 540 nm. Cell viability was expressed as a percent of the control. For drug treatment, antioxidant Trolox, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), staurosporine, cyclosporine, and sodium azide were used to delineate the effects of Ubisol-Q10.

Detections of ROS levels and calcium retention capacity

Intracellular superoxide anion production was determined using dihydroethidium (DHE) as a fluorescent probe. Briefly, cells (2x106/ml) were incubated with the DHE (2.5 μM) for 30 min at 37ºC, after which they were washed, resuspended in phosphate buffered saline (PBS), and analyzed for fluorescent signal intensity using Fluoromax-4 spectrofluorometer at the excitation and emission wavelengths of 480 nm and 590 nm respectively. The florescence was recorded and represented as relative fluorescence intensity (RFI). For measuring calcium retention capacity of the mitochondria, HT22 cells (5×106) were harvested, washed with PBS and permeabilized immediately with digitonin (50 µg/ml) for 2 min at 25°C in a Ca2+ free KCl medium (125 mM KCl, 2 mM K2HPO4, 1 mM MgCl2, 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.0) 37 Measurements of Ca2+ were performed fluorimetrically at 37°C with a FluoroMax-4 spectrofluorometer equipped with magnetic stirring and thermostatic controls. Extra-mitochondrial Ca2+ was measured in the presence of 1 µM Calcium Green-5N, 10 mM glutamate, 0.5 mM malate or 10mM succinate with excitation and emission wavelengths set at 506 and 530 nm respectively. The free calcium (Ca2+) uptake and Ca2+ release of digitonin-permeabilized cells were measured by loading cells with Ca2+ pulses at constant time intervals.

Measurement of mitochondrial membrane potential

Mitochondrial membrane potential was measured using JC-1 dye. JC-1 exhibits potential-dependent accumulation in mitochondria with a fluorescence emission shift from green (~529 nm) to red (~590 nm). Briefly, HT22 cells were grown on Lab-Tek II Chamber Slide (Thermo Scientific) and incubated with JC-1 dye (5 µg/ml). JC-1 was excited at 488 nm and emission of JC-1 monomer (depolarized) and J-aggregate (polarized mitochondria) forms were captured at 525/50 and 605/75 nm, respectively, with Nikon laser-scanning confocal microscope (Nikon Eclipse C1). To avoid the photobleaching, laser power was attenuated to the minimal level. Minimum three fields per group were captured to determine the changes in mitochondrial membrane potential. Carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP 5 µM) was used as a control to dissipate mitochondrial potential.

Subcellular fractions and Immunoblotting

Mitochondrial and cytosolic fractions were used in the study and the fractions were isolated as described previously 5. Briefly, cells were washed with PBS and resuspended in cytosolic lysis buffer (250 mM sucrose, 70 mM KCl, 137 mM NaCl, 4.3 mM Na2HPO4, 1.4 mM KH2PO4 pH 7.2, 200 μg/ml digitonin, 100 mM PMSF, protease inhibitor cocktail (Halt, Thermo Scientific) for 5 min on ice. These cells were centrifuged at 1,000 × g for 5 min to separate the supernatant as a cytosolic fraction and the pellet was resuspended in two volumes of mitochondrial lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 2 mM EGTA, 0.2% (v/v) Triton X-100, 0.3% NP-40, PMSF, protease inhibitor cocktail) for 5 min on ice. The resulting suspension was centrifuged at 10,000 × g for 10 min and the supernatant was collected as the mitochondrial fraction. The purity of the fractions has been previously verified 39. Protein concentration was determined using the Bradford assay and same amount of protein (20 μg) was loaded into each lane of a 4-12% NuPAGE gel (Invitrogen). Following electrophoresis, proteins were transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane (Invitrogen) and blocked for nonspecific binding with 5% skim milk. The membrane was incubated for target proteins using primary antibodies specific for Drp1 (1:1000, 8570, Cell Signaling USA), phospho-Drp1 (Ser616 1:800, 3455, Cell Signaling USA), Fis1 (1:500, sc-98900, MBL,MA USA), AIF (1:500, sc-9416, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, CA, USA), cytochrome C (1:500, sc-13560, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, CA, USA), VDAC (1 µg/ml ab14744, Abcam Inc, MA, USA) or Actin (1:1000,sc-1616, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, CA, USA) overnight at 4ºC. The membranes were incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies for 1 h at room temperature. The blots were then developed using the Pierce ECL Western Blotting Substrate (Thermo Scientific). The β-actin or VDAC bands were used as internal loading controls and the ratios of the targeted proteins and loading control were calculated and presented as final results.

Mitochondrial morphometrics

HT22 cells were grown on Lab-Tek II Chamber Slide (Thermoscientific). Mitochondrial staining was carried out with MitoTracker®Red CM-XRos (Invitrogen) as described previously 5. DAPI was used to label nuclei. Minimum 3 images were captured in each well for analyses using the Nikon laser-scanning confocal microscope at the magnification of 63X. An image process program was designed to identify and quantify mitochondria structures from the RGB images according to the published method 40, 41. In brief, we first created a mask to filter out the nucleus regions that are mostly blue. Next, we extracted only the red channel and converted it to a gray-scale image. The resulting image was adjusted to increase contrast. A "top-hat" spatial filter was applied in order to isolate bright features from a dark background using a flat, disk-shaped structuring element with a radius of 2 pixels. In order to reduce noise while preserving edges, a 2-D median filtering with a dimension of 3 x 3 pixels was applied twice. An additional threshold was applied to remove darker pixels. For morphological analysis, three parameters were calculated for each mitochondrial object: the form factor F (perimeters2/(4π• area)), mitochondrial perimeter and mitochondrial area. We also computed the total number of mitochondria per cell. Form factor is independent of image magnification and has a minimum value of 1 (corresponding to a perfect circle). For statistical analysis, we calculated the average values of F for each image.

AIF immunostaining

HT22 cells were grown on Lab-Tek II Chamber Slides (Thermo Scientific). Cells were fixed 18 h after glutamate exposure with 4% paraformaldehyde for 20 min, washed with PBS, and permeabilized in Triton X-100 (0.3%) for 5 min. The cells were blocked with 10% donkey serum for 1 h at room temperature. After blocking, cells were incubated overnight at 4°C with primary antibodies against AIF (1:200, Santa Cruz Biotechnology CA). Cells were washed and incubated for 2 h at room temperature with secondary antibodies conjugated with Alexa Fluor 488 (1:500 dilution; Invitrogen). Finally, slides were mounted with Vectashield mounting medium containing DAPI (Vector Laboratories). Slides were scanned with a Nikon laser-scanning confocal microscope. The experiment was repeated thrice and, at minimum, three fields per group were captured and processed for analysis.

DNA fragmentation assay

DNA fragmentation due to apoptosis was assessed by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end-labeling (TUNEL) assay using a DeadEnd Fluorometric TUNEL system kit (Promega, USA) per the kit instructions. A minimum of three random fields per group were captured. TUNEL positive cells were counted and presented as percent of total cells.

Statistical analysis

Data are presented as mean±SD and analyzed with GraphPad Prism 5 software. One-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's multiple comparison test and two-way ANOVA followed by Bonferoni test were used when appropriate. A p<0.05 is considered statistically significant.

Results

Pretreatment of HT22 cells with Ubisol-Q10 blocked glutamate-induced cell death

To determine the neuroprotective role of Q10, we exposed Ubisol-Q10 pretreated and untreated HT22 neuronal cells to glutamate and cell survival was determined by MTT assay and cellular morphology (Fig. ). Glutamate induced cell death in HT22 cells in a dose (data not shown) and time dependent manner 5. Therefore, the cell survival was limited to around 20 % of control (Fig. ) with 4 mM of glutamate after 24 h of exposure 5. In contrast, Ubisol-Q10 alone up to the 25 µg/ml range was well tolerated by HT22 neurons without any influence on cell viability (Fig. ). Interestingly, Ubisol-Q10 (10-25 µg/ml) blocked glutamate-induced death in HT22 cells; thereby significantly (p<0.001) improved the cell survival (from 21 to 87 %) of control HT22 cells (Fig. ). The Ubisol-Q10-induced protection was not transiently limited to 24 h as the rescue effects were also noticed up to 48 h of glutamate exposure (data not shown), suggesting the long-term protective effect of Ubisol-Q10.

Ubisol-Q10 decreased ROS levels and stabilized mitochondrial membrane potential

We have previously shown that glutamate exposure alters ROS levels and mitochondrial membrane potential 5. In the present study, we set the baseline level of ROS production in control cells as 100%. Exposure of HT22 neurons to glutamate resulted in enhanced ROS formation when measured after 18 h (p<0.05). Presently, we determined whether Ubisol-Q10 treatment could prevent the increase in ROS production and whether this effect is associated with stabilizing mitochondrial potential (Fig. ). Results revealed that glutamate induced the generation of ROS whereas Ubisol-Q10 treatment curtailed it (Fig. ). Likewise, glutamate also affected mitochondrial membrane potential. Glutamate exposure resulted in membrane depolarization as reflected by the increase in green fluorescence of JC-1 monomer. Pretreatment with Ubisol-Q10 prevented glutamate-induced mitochondrial membrane depolarization as reflected by the predominant red fluorescence of JC-1 aggregates that were taken by normal polarized mitochondria. Non-treated control cells and cells treated with Ubisol-Q10 alone maintained normal mitochondrial potential (Fig. ). To determine whether glutamate-induced cell death is mediated by increased free ROS production and loss of mitochondrial potential through formation of mPTP, we used free radical scavenger Trolox and Cyp-D /ANT channel inhibitor cyclosporine. Cell viability study results revealed that Trolox significantly ameliorated glutamate toxicity (Fig. ), while cyclosporine A failed to prevent glutamate induced cell death in HT22 cells (Data not shown). These results suggest that glutamate-induced cell death is mediated through formation of ROS and mPTP independent of Cyp-D /ANT.

Ubisol-Q10 prevented glutamate-reduced calcium retention capacity

Mitochondria have been shown to transiently store calcium and thereby regulating cellular Ca2+ homeostasis. Reduction or loss of calcium retention capacity of the mitochondria leads to formation of mPTP and opening of mPTP has been shown to be a primary mediator of cell death. We investigated whether glutamate lowers calcium retention capacity and whether Ubisol-Q10 could improve it. Mitochondrial calcium uptake capacity was detected using Calcium Green-5N. Addition of calcium causes increase in extra-mitochondrial calcium and then the concentration decreased as the calcium is taken up by the mitochondria. Under normal condition, cells with Ubisol-Q10 addition did not differ in mitochondrial calcium uptake capacity as compared to control cells. After glutamate exposure, calcium retention capacity was decreased compared to control cells. Ubisol-Q10 pretreatment in glutamate-exposed cells restored the calcium retention capacity to control level (Fig. ).

Ubisol-Q10 inhibits glutamate-induced mitochondrial fragmentation

Previously, we have shown that glutamate affects mitochondrial morphology in HT22 cell by increasing mitochondrial fission, which may leads to increased ROS formation, loss of mitochondrial potential and calcium retention capacity, and adversely affects mitochondrial function 5. We investigated whether the protective effects of Ubisol-Q10 is mediated through preventing mitochondrial fragmentation. Mitochondria are organized as a tubular network under normal control conditions. Under stress conditions, mitochondrial fission occurs and the reticular mitochondria break into short, round pieces, a process defined as mitochondrial fragmentation. Mitochondrial fission markers Drp1 and Fis1 were measured using immunoblotting. Drp1 is normally present in the cytosol of the cell, but when phosphorylated at Ser616, Drp1 translocates to the mitochondria and stimulates mitochondrial fission. The results showed that phospho-Drp1 and Fis1 were significantly increased in the mitochondrial fraction, but not in the cytosolic fraction, after 18 h of glutamate exposure. Treatment with Ubisol-Q10 completely blocked the phosphorylation of Drp1 and the increase in Fis1 (Fig. ). Consistent with the protein levels of Drp1 and Fis1, mitochondrial imaging study using MitoTracker Red revealed that the glutamate caused marked mitochondrial morphologic alteration. As seen in Figure , the reticularity of the mitochondrial network was broken into small round shaped mitochondrial pieces after 18 h of glutamate exposure. Pretreatment with Ubisol-Q10 restored the mitochondrial tubular network in glutamate-exposed cells (Fig. ). To determine the effects of glutamate exposure on mitochondrial morphology and the degree of mitochondrial network branching in cells treated with/without Ubisol-Q10, we determined the mitochondrial perimeter and form factor (branching). The result revealed that glutamate significantly (p<0.05) lowered the mitochondrial perimeter in HT22 cells (Fig. ). Pretreatment with Ubisol-Q10 restored the mitochondrial perimeter in glutamate-exposed cells. Similarly, glutamate exposure markedly affected the network of mitochondria. Mitochondrial was significantly (p<0.05) less branched in cells exposed to glutamate. When pretreated with Ubisol-Q10, cells recovered from glutamate toxicity and restored the form factor, which clearly suggests that Ubisol-Q10 improve cellular mitochondrial function by protecting mitochondrial morphology (Fig. ).

Ubisol-Q10 blocks mitochondrial dysfunction-induced release of AIF

Glutamate-induced cell death in HT22 cells have been shown to be mediated by AIF dependent apoptosis 42, 43. Formation of mPTP may lead to release of mitochondrial proapoptotic proteins such as AIF and others. To examine whether glutamate-induced mitochondrial fragmentation caused release of proapoptotic proteins and whether restoration of mitochondrial structure by Ubisol-Q10 could block the release of mitochondrial proteins, we measured the levels of cytochrome c protein levels in mitochondrial and cytosolic fractions, AIF protein in mitochondrial and nuclear fractions and AIF immunoreactivity (Fig ). The results demonstrated that cytochrome c was not released from the mitochondria into the cytosol (Fig ). However, AIF immunocytochemistry showed nuclear localization of AIF after glutamate treatment in HT22 cells and treatment with Ubisol-Q10 significantly blocked the AIF presence in the nuclei (Fig ). These results were further confirmed by immunoblotting that showed a significant increase of AIF protein in the nuclear fraction after glutamate exposure and the AIF level was markedly reduced by Ubisol-Q10 (Fig ).

Ubisol-Q10 reduces glutamate-induced apoptotic injury

Detection of apoptotic cell death by TUNEL staining revealed that incubation of cells with 4 µM glutamate for 18 h significantly increased the number of TUNEL-positive stained cells (Fig. ). The average percent of TUNEL positive cells reach to 38.7±17.9%. In contrast, the number of TUNEL positive cell in glutamate-exposed cells was significantly (p<0.05) reduced by Ubisol-Q10 treatment. As a result, the number of TUNEL positive cells reduced to non-glutamate control level. Few TUNEL positive cells were observed in non-treated control cells and with Q10-treatment alone. A panel of TUNEL-stained images is shown in Figure and percent of TUNEL positive cells in each group is given in Figure

Discussion

Mitochondrial dysfunction due to various reasons including oxidative stress plays a crucial role in activation of cell death pathways. Recently, we have shown that mitochondrial dysfunction could be the result of mitochondrial fragmentation induced by glutamate toxicity 5 and glutamate toxicity is a key step in the progression of neuronal loss in acute and chronic neurodegenerative diseases. CoQ10, in addition to carrying electrons during oxidative phosphorylation, positively influence many cellular functions presumably due to its antioxidant property 29, 32, 33, 44. Although, it is not clear whether the beneficial effects of CoQ10 is only limited to its antioxidant property, we and others have reported that CoQ10 also prevent mitochondrial dysfunction-induced activation of apoptosis 29-32, 34, 35. Presently we demonstrate that glutamate causes mitochondrial fragmentation, mPTP formation, calcium deregulation and mitochondrial potential loss. These events lead to AIF nuclear translocation, DNA fragmentation, and cell death. Ubisol-Q10 pretreatment prevented glutamate-induced cell death by blocking mitochondrial fragmentation, ameliorating mitochondrial dysfunction, stabilizing the mitochondrial membrane potential, blocking the mPTP formation, and preventing the AIF nuclear translocation and DNA fragmentation. These results clearly indicate that Ubisol-Q10 offers neuroprotective benefits partly through preserving mitochondrial structure and function, which thereby prevents cell damage. In the present study, we have shown that glutamate induces cell death in HT22 cells through oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction and AIF release 5, 9, 42, 43, 45, 46. Glutamate-induced mitochondrial dysfunction could be the result of mitochondrial fragmentation due to activation of Drp1 as reported previously 5. The fragmented mitochondria are sensitized to Bax/Bid-dependent pore formation and activation of apoptosis 16, 47, 48. Drp1 is normally present in the cytosol, but once phosphorylated at Ser616, it translocates to the mitochondria where it localizes to potential division sites on mitochondrial outer membrane with the help of Fis1. In the present study, we show that glutamate exposure not only increased the levels of Fis1 but also increased the phosphorylation and mitochondrial translocation of Drp1 (Fig. ), which is consistent with our previous finding 5. Increased mitochondrial Drp1 levels were well correlated with the mitochondrial morphology (Fig. ), suggesting that Drp1 induces mitochondrial fragmentation in cells exposed to glutamate. Likewise, mitochondrial fragmentation has been shown to be associated with increased oxidative stress and mitochondrial depolarization, whereas inhibiting Drp1 offers neuroprotection 43, 47. Glutamate toxicity can also trigger calcium influx that leads to mitochondrial calcium overload 12 whereas, once fragmented, mitochondria reduce their calcium buffering capacity 49. Our study showed that glutamate-exposed cells exhibited impaired mitochondrial calcium loading capacity, AIF nuclear translocation, DNA fragmentation, and cell death (Fig. ). It is likely that mitochondrial calcium overload alone or in combination with increased ROS production, triggers the formation of mPTP that results in the activation of cell death pathway. Additionally, it is believed that glutamate-mediated oxidative stress due to increased ROS production has been shown to be a biphasic event in a way that glutamate induces a primary surge in ROS production after 6-8 h and followed by a secondary boost after 18 h 43. The primary ROS could be ascribed to glutamate induced glutathione depletion as proposed previously 50, whereas the secondary boost in ROS production could be the result of mitochondrial fragmentation due to the activation of Drp1. Furthermore, presently we showed that glutamate-induced cell death could be prevented with the supplementation of Ubisol-Q10 (Fig. ). CoQ10, which is an endogenous electron carrier in the inner mitochondrial membrane, has been widely studied for its antioxidative properties 29, 44. Moreover, Papucci et al. have reported that CoQ10 could also prevent apoptosis in response to apoptotic stimuli that do not generate free radicals 35. We and others have previously shown that cells death mechanism in HT22 cells are activated due to mitochondrial dysfunction 5, 9, 42, 43 and mitochondrial dysfunction could be the result of mitochondrial fragmentation caused by Drp1. Inhibiting Drp1 improves the survival of cells in vitro and in vivo conditions of glutamate toxicity 45. We presently reported that Ubisol-Q10 blocked Drp1 mitochondrial translocation and thereby reduced mitochondrial fragmentation upon glutamate exposure. Mitochondria appeared tubular and branched in cells treated with Ubisol-Q10 and Ubisol-Q10+glutmate. Whereas, mitochondria appeared small and rounded in glutamate only treated cells. Fragmented mitochondria are not only prone to increased oxidative stress and depolarization 51 but also are sensitized to proapoptotic Bcl-2 family protein mediated pore formation 16, 47, 48. We found that Ubisol-Q10 supplementation not only blocked increase in ROS production but also prevented mitochondrial potential loss upon glutamate exposure (Fig ). Therefore, cells treated with Ubisol-Q10 resisted glutamate-induced decreases of mitochondrial perimeter and mitochondrial branching, and maintained normal mitochondrial morphology (Fig. ). Although, it is not clear from the present study whether Ubisol-Q10 directly blocks mitochondrial fragmentation by inhibiting Drp1 or whether Ubisol-Q10 prevents the primary surge in ROS production which is responsible for Drp1 activation and mitochondrial fragmentation, CoQ10 has been suggested to prevent mitochondrial depolarization independent to its antioxidant property 35. In the present study, we also showed that Ubisol-Q10 has a slightly better effect on cell survival than antioxidant Trolox (Fig. ). Moreover, evidence indicates that ROS production could be increased following mitochondrial fragmentation 52. By blocking mitochondrial fragmentation, Ubisol-Q10 treatment may lower ROS production and prevent the mitochondrial depolarization. Mitochondrial depolarization is an indicator of mPTP formation during various stresses that reduce mitochondrial calcium retention capacity 50. Glutamate exposure in the present study decreased mitochondrial calcium capacity, whereas Ubisol-Q10 pretreatment restored capacity and ultimately improved cell survival in cells exposed to glutamate (Fig. ). Likewise, mitochondrial fragmentation reduces the mitochondrial calcium retention capacity and aids in formation of mPTP though which proapoptotic protein are released. Therefore, the present study reveals that Ubisol-Q10 directly or indirectly blocks Drp1 dependent mitochondrial fragmentation, prevents mitochondrial potential loss and mPTP formation, restores mitochondrial calcium capacity, and inhibits AIF release and apoptotic DNA fragmentation, and thereby improves survival in cells exposed to glutamate. All the evidence supports that Ubisol-Q10 offers beneficial effects by preserving mitochondrial structure and function.

Conclusion

Glutamate causes cell death by inducing mitochondrial fragmentation and dysfunction, formation of mPTP, and nuclear translocation of AIF. Ubisol-Q10 prevents glutamate-induced cell death by blocking mitochondrial fragmentation, preserving mitochondrial calcium retention capacity and membrane potential, preventing mPTP formation, AIF release, and DNA fragmentation. Ubisol-Q10 supplementation may be beneficial in ameliorating stroke, brain and spinal traumatic injuries, mitochondria-associated neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders.
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3.  Mitochondria in DRG neurons undergo hyperglycemic mediated injury through Bim, Bax and the fission protein Drp1.

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Journal:  J Cell Physiol       Date:  2011-02       Impact factor: 6.384

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7.  Roles of the mammalian mitochondrial fission and fusion mediators Fis1, Drp1, and Opa1 in apoptosis.

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Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2004-09-08       Impact factor: 4.138

8.  Glutamate induces mitochondrial dynamic imbalance and autophagy activation: preventive effects of selenium.

Authors:  Santosh Kumari; Suresh L Mehta; P Andy Li
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-06-19       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Coenzyme Q10 protects astrocytes from ROS-induced damage through inhibition of mitochondria-mediated cell death pathway.

Authors:  Li Jing; Mao-Tao He; Yue Chang; Suresh L Mehta; Qing-Ping He; Jian-Zhong Zhang; P Andy Li
Journal:  Int J Biol Sci       Date:  2015-01-01       Impact factor: 6.580

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Authors:  Haining Li; Guisheng Chen; Wanrui Ma; Ping-An Andy Li
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2014-07-31       Impact factor: 5.923

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Authors:  Diones Caeran Bueno; Rômulo Faria Santos Canto; Viviane de Souza; Rafaela Rafognatto Andreguetti; Flávio Augusto Rocha Barbosa; Aline Aita Naime; Partha Narayan Dey; Verena Wüllner; Mark William Lopes; Antônio Luiz Braga; Axel Methner; Marcelo Farina
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2020-06-08       Impact factor: 5.682

5.  Mitochonic Acid 5 (MA-5) Facilitates ATP Synthase Oligomerization and Cell Survival in Various Mitochondrial Diseases.

Authors:  Tetsuro Matsuhashi; Takeya Sato; Shin-Ichiro Kanno; Takehiro Suzuki; Akihiro Matsuo; Yuki Oba; Motoi Kikusato; Emi Ogasawara; Tai Kudo; Kosuke Suzuki; Osamu Ohara; Hiroko Shimbo; Fumika Nanto; Hiroaki Yamaguchi; Daisuke Saigusa; Yasuno Mukaiyama; Akiko Watabe; Koichi Kikuchi; Hisato Shima; Eikan Mishima; Yasutoshi Akiyama; Yoshitsugu Oikawa; H O Hsin-Jung; Yukako Akiyama; Chitose Suzuki; Mitsugu Uematsu; Masaki Ogata; Naonori Kumagai; Masaaki Toyomizu; Atsushi Hozawa; Nariyasu Mano; Yuji Owada; Setsuya Aiba; Teruyuki Yanagisawa; Yoshihisa Tomioka; Shigeo Kure; Sadayoshi Ito; Kazuto Nakada; Ken-Ichiro Hayashi; Hitoshi Osaka; Takaaki Abe
Journal:  EBioMedicine       Date:  2017-05-13       Impact factor: 8.143

6.  Selective Targeting of Cancer Cells by Oxidative Vulnerabilities with Novel Curcumin Analogs.

Authors:  Christopher Pignanelli; Dennis Ma; Megan Noel; Jesse Ropat; Fadi Mansour; Colin Curran; Simon Pupulin; Kristen Larocque; Jianzhang Wu; Guang Liang; Yi Wang; Siyaram Pandey
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-04-24       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 7.  Mitochondrial MPTP: A Novel Target of Ethnomedicine for Stroke Treatment by Apoptosis Inhibition.

Authors:  Yangxin Li; Jiayi Sun; Ruixia Wu; Jinrong Bai; Ya Hou; Yong Zeng; Yi Zhang; Xiaobo Wang; Zhang Wang; Xianli Meng
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2020-03-25       Impact factor: 5.810

  7 in total

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