| Literature DB >> 35590379 |
Zonghan Liu1,2, Yi Sun1,2, Zhengtang Qi1,2, Lu Cao1,2, Shuzhe Ding3,4.
Abstract
Mitochondria play a pivotal role in energy generation and cellular physiological processes. These organelles are highly dynamic, constantly changing their morphology, cellular location, and distribution in response to cellular stress. In recent years, the phenomenon of mitochondrial transfer has attracted significant attention and interest from biologists and medical investigators. Intercellular mitochondrial transfer occurs in different ways, including tunnelling nanotubes (TNTs), extracellular vesicles (EVs), and gap junction channels (GJCs). According to research on intercellular mitochondrial transfer in physiological and pathological environments, mitochondrial transfer hold great potential for maintaining body homeostasis and regulating pathological processes. Multiple research groups have developed artificial mitochondrial transfer/transplantation (AMT/T) methods that transfer healthy mitochondria into damaged cells and recover cellular function. This paper reviews intercellular spontaneous mitochondrial transfer modes, mechanisms, and the latest methods of AMT/T. Furthermore, potential application value and mechanism of AMT/T in disease treatment are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; Cancer therapy; Energy metabolism; Mitochondrial transfer; Mitochondrial transplantation; Stem cell; Tissue injury; mtDNA mutations and deletions
Year: 2022 PMID: 35590379 PMCID: PMC9121600 DOI: 10.1186/s13578-022-00805-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biosci ISSN: 2045-3701 Impact factor: 9.584
Fig. 1A simplified visualization of intercellular mitochondrial transfer modes. a Mitochondria are transported between cells via the TNT structure, and this transport is bidirectional. b The mitochondria-containing EVs bud off/are secreted from the donor cells and then uptake by recipient cells. c The mode of GJC-mediated mitochondrial transfer is ambiguous. Nonclassic form AGJs are plausible: mitochondria exist in the protrusions of donor cells, and the recipient cells connect to the donor cells through invaginating GJCs. Then the recipient cell internalizes GJCs and absorbs mitochondria. d Cell fusion can be spontaneous or artificial
A comparison of AMT/T methods
| Methods | Donor | Recipient | Transfer efficiency | Therapeutic effect | Retention time | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coculture | WJMSCs | 143B ρ0 cells | NA | Proliferation↑ Aerobic viability↑ Cellular motility↑ | 45passages (135 days) | [ |
| Coculture | MSCs | EMCs | 12.4 ± 3.5% (24 h) | Necroptosis-like cell death of MSCs↑ | NA | [ |
| Coincubation | Mitochondria from MSCs | EMCs | 48.9 ± 2.9% (24 h) | Necroptosis-like cell death↑ | NA | [ |
| Coincubation | Mitochondria from TAT‐dextran modified H9c2 cells | EMCs | 170.3 ± 15.7% (24 h) | Bax to Bcl-2 ratio↓ Mitochondrial respiration↑ | NA | [ |
| Coincubation | Mitochondria from EMCs | EMCs | 0.5–27.6% (mitochondria dose-dependent; 24 h) | Cellular viability↑ ATP production↑ Mitochondrial respiration↑ | 1 week | [ |
| Coincubation | Mitochondria from MRC-5 | MRC-5 | 0–17% (over 3 days) | Mitochondria respiration↑ | NA | [ |
| Magnetomito transfer | Mitochondria from MRC-5 | MRC-5 | 78–92% (over 3 days) | Mitochondria respiration↑↑ Cell growth— | NA | [ |
| MitoCeption | Mitochondria from MSC | MDA-MB-231 cancer cells | ~ 1.9–7.1% (mitochondria dose-dependent; 24 h) | OXPHOS↑ ATP production↑ Cancer cell invasion and proliferation↑ | NA | [ |
| Adapted MitoCeption | Primary allogeneic mitochondrial mix | Peripheral blood mononuclear cells | 5–40%; 60–100%; (mitochondria dose-dependent; cell type dependent; 1 h, 18 h) | Mitochondrial mass, function, and viability↑ P53↓ ROS↓ ATP production↑ | NA | [ |
| MitoCeption | Mitochondria from HEK293T cells | 143BTK ρ0 cells/BJ ρ0 cells | ~ 80–25% (2 h) | ATP production↑ Mitochondrial respiration↑ | Stably retained in 143BTK ρ0 cells | [ |
| MitoPunch | Mitochondria from HEK293T cells | 143BTK ρ0 cells/BJ ρ0 cells | ~ 50–10% (2 h) | ATP production↑↑ Mitochondrial respiration↑↑ | Stably retained in both 143BTK ρ0 and BJ ρ0 cells | [ |
| Photothermal nanoblade | Mitochondria from HEK293T cells | 143BTK-ρ0 cells | ~ 2% | Metabolism-related gene expression↑ Metabolic network activity↑ Metabolite levels↑ | Stably retained | [ |
| Cell fusion | Different donor | Different recipient | 0.0001–0.5% | NA | NA | [ |
~ : Estimate; ↑: promote; ↓: reduce; —: no effect
OXPHOS oxidative phosphorylation, MRC-5 human embryonic lung fibroblasts, WJMSCs Wharton’s jelly mesenchymal stem cells, EMCs endometrial gland‐derived mesenchymal cells, NA not available
Fig. 2A flow diagram of AMT//T. Step 1, the mitochondria are isolated and the cells are prepared. Distinct markers are labelled in mitochondria and cells for subsequent comparison. Step 2, isolated mitochondria are transferred by different AMT/T methods: a Coculture and noncontact co-culture (transwell). b Isolated mitochondria coincubated with cells. Methods "Magnetomitotransfer," "MitoCeption," "MitoPunch," and "centrifugation" methods are used to increase the efficiency of mitochondrial transfer. c Isolated mitochondria are injected in situ, intravenously (i.v.), or intranasally. d Autologous mitochondrial microinjection to improve oocyte quality and fertility outcome. Step 3, in vitro studies, quantitatively measure the efficiency of mitochondrial transfer by confocal microscopy, flow cytometry, or electron microscope. In the in vivo studies, subjects' behaviour and organ function are measured. Step4, the effect of mitochondrial transfer is evaluated. MPF mechanical plunger force, CF centrifugal force, M plate magnetic plate, M beads magnetic beads, MF magnetic force
Fig. 4The putative mechanism by which cells engulf and internalize exogenous mitochondria. Exogenous mitochondria enter the cell via actin-dependent endocytosis or macropinocytosis and then form endosomes or macropinosomes. A small portion of exogenous mitochondria bind to lysosomes and are degraded; a large portion of exogenous mitochondria escape from endosomes, macropinosomes or lysosomes and fuse with endogenous mitochondria, which is mediated by MFN1/2 and OPA1
Summary of mitochondrial transfer/transplantation in different organ
| Organ | Disease | Donor | Recipient | Methods | Therapeutic effect | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brain | Sepsis-associated brain dysfunction | Pectoralis (allogeneic) | Mouse left lateral ventricle/BV2 microglia | Mitochondrial transplantation (i.c.v. injection)/mitochondrial coincubation | Cognitive impairment↓ Microglial polarization from the M1 phenotype to the M2 phenotype | [ |
| Brain | Schizophrenia | Human lymphocytes/rat brain (xenogeneic) | Schizophrenia-derived lymphoblasts/rat prefrontal cortex neurons | Mitochondrial incubation/mitochondrial transplantation (DI) | Long-lasting cellular oxygen consumption and mitochondrial membrane potential↑ Attentional deficit↓ | [ |
| Brain | PD | HepG2 cells (xenogeneic) | Multiple tissues, including brain, liver, kidney, muscle, and heart tissues of mice | Mitochondrial transplantation (i.v. injection) | ETC activity↑ ROS level↓ Apoptosis and necrosis↓ | [ |
| Brain | PD | PC12 cells (allogeneic)/human osteosarcoma cybrids (xenogeneic) | PC12 cells/ rat dopaminergic neurons | Peptide-mediated mitochondrial incubation/peptide-mediated mitochondrial transplantation (i.c.v. injection) | Cell viability↑ Mitochondrial tolerance to 6-OHDA neurotoxicity↑ Motor function↑ Dopaminergic neuron deterioration↓ | [ |
| Brain | AD | HeLa cells (xenogeneic) | Brain and liver of mice | Mitochondrial transplantation (i.v. injection) | Cognitive performance↑ Neuronal loss↓ Gliosis↓ Mitochondrial dysfunction in brain↓ Mitochondrial activity in liver↑ | [ |
| Brain | IR injury | Pectoralis major (autologous) | Widespread distribution in the brain, mainly in ischaemic penumbra areas of the brains of rats | Mitochondrial transplantation (i.c.v. injection) | Cellular oxidative stress↓ Apoptosis↓ Astrogliosis↓ Neurogenesis↑ Brain infarct volume↓ Neurological deficits↓ | [ |
| Brain | IR injury | Rat MSCs (allogeneic) | Rat peri-infarct area of brain | MSC transplantation (intra-arterial injection) | Mitochondrial activity↑ Angiogenesis↑ Infarct volume↓ Functional recovery↑ | [ |
| Spine | Spinal cord injury | PC12 cells/soleus muscle (allogeneic) | Resident spinal cord cells of rats | Mitochondrial transplantation (DI) | Oxygen consumption rate↑ Long-lasting motor and sensory functions— | [ |
| Heart | Myocardial infarction | hMADS (xenogeneic) | hMADS/endothelial or cardiac cells/mouse myocardium | Coculture/hMADS transplantation (surrounding the infarcted site injection) | HO-1 expression↑PGC1 -α expression↑ Plasma cardiac troponin t levels↓ Intracardiac caspase-3 protein expression↓ | [ |
| Heart | Anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy | Human iPSC-MSCs (xenogeneic) | NMCs | Coculture (TNTs)/iPSC-MSC transplantation (intramyocardial injection) | Mitochondrial respiration↑ NMC viability↑ | [ |
| Heart | Anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy | Human iPSC-MSCs/BM-MSCs (xenogeneic) | Mouse myocardium | iPSC-MSC/BM-MSC transplantation (intramyocardial injection) | Heart function↑ Myocardial damage↓ Myocardial fibrosis↓ Cell apoptosis↓ ATP production↑ Oxidative stress↓ Inflammation↓ | [ |
| Heart | IR injury | Pectoralis major of rabbit (autologous) | Rabbit myocardium | Mitochondrial transplantation (DI) | Creatine kinase MB↓ Cardiac troponin-I↓ Apoptosis↓ Infarct size↓ Oxygen consumption↑ ATP production↑ Precursor metabolites for energy↑ Cellular respiration↑ | [ |
| Heart | IR injury | Human adult cardiac fibroblasts (xenogeneic)/ rabbit liver (autologous) | Rabbit myocardium | Mitochondrial transplantation (DI)/mitochondrial coronary vasculature perfusion | End diastolic pressure↓ Positive dp/dt↑ Segmental shortening↑ Infarct size↓ | [ |
| Lung | Acute respiratory distress syndrome | Human MSCs (allogeneic)/murine alveolar macrophages (allogeneic) | Human monocyte-derived macrophages/mouse LPS-injured lung | Noncontact coculture (EVs)/instillation of alveolar macrophages treated with MSC-derived EVs (intranasally instilled) | Macrophages OXPHOS↑ Anti-inflammatory response↑ Phagocytosis↑ Lung injury↓ | [ |
| Lung | Acute lung injury | Mouse BMSCs (allogeneic) | Mouse alveolar epithelium cells | BMSC transplantation (airway-instilled) | ATP concentrations↑ Alveolar leucocytosis↓ Protein leakage↓ Surfactant secretion↑ Mouse survival↑ | [ |
| Lung | Airway injury and allergic airway inflammation | MSCs (allogeneic) | Lung bronchial epithelial cells of mice | MSC transplantation (intratracheal or intranasal route) | Caspase-3↓ Caspase-9↓ Apoptosis↓ Inflammation↓ Mitochondrial function↑ | [ |
| Lung | Alveolar epithelial-capillary barrier disruption | MSCs (allogeneic) | Primary human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells/human small airway epithelial cells/lung | EV cocultured/EV transplantation (i.v. injection) | Barrier integrity↑ Mitochondrial respiration ↑ ATP turnover↑ Mitophagy↓ mtDNA replication↑ Inflammatory response↓ Mitochondrial function↑ | [ |
| Liver | Carbon tetrachloride-induced liver injury | Mouse liver (allogeneic) | Mouse hepatocytes | Mitochondrial co‐incubation/mitochondrial transplantation (i.v. injection) | Liver injury↓ Liver fibrosis↓ ROS level↓ ATP content↑ OXPHOS↑ Cell proliferation↓ Xenobiotic metabolism transformation↑ Protein homeostasis↑ | [ |
| Kidney | Diabetic nephropathy | Rat BM-MSCs (allogeneic) | Rat renal proximal tubular epithelial cells/mouse kidney | Mitochondrial transplantation (under the renal capsule of rats)/MSC transplantation (i.v. injected)/coculture/mitochondrial coincubation | Colony formation↑ Apoptosis↓ SOD2↑ Bcl-2↑ ROS production↓ Megalin and SGLT2 expression↑ Renal tubules structural restoration↑ | [ |
| Bone | Bone defect | Rat BMSCs (autologous/allogeneic) | BMSCs/parietal bone of rats | Mitochondrial coincubation /mitochondria-recipient BMSC transplantation (DI) | Cell proliferation and migration↑ Osteogenic differentiation↑ Bone defect repair↑ OXPHOS↑ ATP production↑ | [ |
| Bone | Osteoarthritis | Rat BMSCs (allogeneic) | Rat chondrocytes | Coculture | Mitochondrial membrane potential↑ Mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes activity↑ ATP content↑ Apoptosis↓ Type II collagen secretion↑ Proteoglycan protein↑ | [ |
| Skeletal muscle | Skeletal muscle atrophy | Human umbilical cord- MSCs (xenogeneic) | Rat myoblast cells | Centrifugation | Cell proliferation↑ ATP content↑ MMP↑ PGC-1↑ AMPK/FoxO3/Atrogene pathway↓ | [ |
| Skeletal muscle | Tendinopathy | Human umbilical cord-MSCs (allogeneic)/rat L6 myoblasts (allogeneic) | Human tenocytes/rat Achilles tendon | Centrifugation/Mitochondrial transplantation (DI) | Tenomodulin↑ Collagen 1↑ MMP1↓ ROS↓ ATP production↑ Mitochondrial fusion↑ Mitochondrial fission↓ Apoptosis↓ Inflammation↓ | [ |
↑: promote; ↓: reduce; —: no effect
i.c.v. injection intracerebroventricular injection, hMADS human multipotent adipose-derived stem cells, NMCs neonatal mouse cardiomyocytes