| Literature DB >> 30881379 |
Eligio F Iannetti1,2, Alessandro Prigione3, Jan A M Smeitink1,4, Werner J H Koopman2, Julien Beyrath1, Herma Renkema1.
Abstract
Mitochondria are best known as the powerhouses of the cells but their cellular role goes far beyond energy production; among others, they have a pivotal function in cellular calcium and redox homeostasis. Mitochondrial dysfunction is often associated with severe and relatively rare disorders with an unmet therapeutic need. Given their central integrating role in multiple cellular pathways, mitochondrial dysfunction is also relevant in the pathogenesis of various other, more common, human pathologies. Here we discuss how live-cell high content microscopy can be used for image-based phenotypic profiling to assess mitochondrial (dys) function. From this perspective, we discuss a selection of live-cell fluorescent reporters and imaging strategies and discuss the pros/cons of human cell models in mitochondrial research. We also present an overview of live-cell high content microscopy applications used to detect disease-associated cellular phenotypes and perform cell-based drug screening.Entities:
Keywords: HCS; assay development; cell models of disease; cellomics; fluorescent probes; live cell microscopy; mitochondrial disease; pathological phenotype
Year: 2019 PMID: 30881379 PMCID: PMC6405630 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.00131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Live imaging cell-based mitochondrial readouts and probes.
| Readouts and probes | Pros and cons | A | B | C | D | E |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TMRM (or TMRE) | Pros: fast equilibration, low non-specific bindings, low ETC inhibition, low toxicity. | c | m | 553 | 576 | |
| rhod 123 | Pros: can be used in quenching mode for fast resolving studies to monitor acute changes in Δψ. | c | m | 507 | 529 | |
| DiOC6(3) | Cons: non-specific binding. | c | m | 489 | 506 | |
| JC-1 | Pros: JC-1 aggregates emit at different λ discriminating high and low Δψ. Cons: Inconsistent experimental data. | c | d | 498 | 525/595 | |
| MitoTracker | Pros: retained after cell fixation. Cons: not suitable for Δψ live monitoring. | c | m | ∗ | ∗ | |
| CM-H2DCFDA | Cons: target aspecificity, no subcellular targeting. | c | m | 495 | 529 | |
| DHE | Cons: target aspecificity, no subcellular targeting. | c | m | 480 | 520 | |
| MitoSOX | Pros: mitochondrial localization. Cons: target aspecificity. | c | m | 510 | 580 | |
| BODIPY 581/591 C11 | Pros: intracellular membrane lipid targeting. | c | d | 500/650 | 510/665 | |
| MitoPerOx | Pros: BODIPY 581/591 C11 properties with mitochondrial localization and faster equilibration. | c | d | 580/600 | 590/520 | |
| rxYFP | Cons: pH sensitivity, target aspecificity. | g | m | 513 | 527 | |
| roGFP | Pros: minor pH sensitivity than rxYFP, possibility to perform kinetic studies for long-lasting redox changes. | g | d | 400/480 | 510 | |
| HyPer | Pros: specific indicator of H2O2. Cons: pH sensitivity. | g | d | 420/500 | 516 | |
| ATeam | Cons: phototoxicity during long-time observation, pH sensitivity. | g | d | 435 | 527/475 | |
| BTeam | Pros: increased detection sensitivity, reduced phototoxicity for long kinetic measurement than ATeam. | g | d | 460 | 455/527 | |
| ARP-1 | Pros: pH independent, higher sensitivity, higher selectivity to distinguish ATP from its analogs. | c | m | 500 | 557 | |
| RSL+ | Pros: mitochondrial localized, higher sensitivity, higher selectivity to distinguish ATP from its analogs. | c | m | 520 | 583 | |
Human cell models used in mitochondrial research.
| Pros | Cons | |
|---|---|---|
relatively easy availability from patients and matched controls easy isolation robustness in culture, storage, and transport low cost not genetically modified flat morphology and a relatively large size allow non-confocal imaging present the biological aging of the patients and are usually sampled at the moment of diagnosis | do not originate from the defective organs stress conditions are often necessary to enhance pathological symptoms slow proliferation require large surface to grow significant number of cells can be used only for a limited number of passages | |
relationship between mtDNA and phenotype can be studied robustness in culture, storage, and transport low cost | nuclear-mitochondrial interactions are lost cancer-like glycolytic bioenergetics profile genetics aberrations useful only to study mitochondrial encoded mutations | |
mimic the defective organs originate from the specific patient pathological symptoms are usually present derived from easily accessible patient material (skin, blood, urine) can be differentiated into virtually any cell type of the body open possibilities for precision medicine approaches | genetically modified: mutagenesis risk suboptimal standardization mtDNA mutations can impair cellular reprogramming to iPSCs and differentiation costly and timely procedure iPSc heterogeneity can mask actual disease-associated phenotypes low yield of differentiated cells | |