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Sub-Cellular Metabolomics Contributes Mitochondria-Specific Metabolic Insights to a Mouse Model of Leigh Syndrome

Direct injury of mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) complex I by Ndufs4 subunit mutations results in complex I deficiency (CID) and a progressive encephalomyopathy, known as Leigh syndrome. While mitochondrial, cytosolic and multi-organelle pathways are known to be involved in the neuromuscular LS...

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Autores principales: van der Walt, Gunter, Lindeque, Jeremie Z., Mason, Shayne, Louw, Roan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8537744/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34677373
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11100658
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author van der Walt, Gunter
Lindeque, Jeremie Z.
Mason, Shayne
Louw, Roan
author_facet van der Walt, Gunter
Lindeque, Jeremie Z.
Mason, Shayne
Louw, Roan
author_sort van der Walt, Gunter
collection PubMed
description Direct injury of mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) complex I by Ndufs4 subunit mutations results in complex I deficiency (CID) and a progressive encephalomyopathy, known as Leigh syndrome. While mitochondrial, cytosolic and multi-organelle pathways are known to be involved in the neuromuscular LS pathogenesis, compartment-specific metabolomics has, to date, not been applied to murine models of CID. We thus hypothesized that sub-cellular metabolomics would be able to contribute organelle-specific insights to known Ndufs4 metabolic perturbations. To that end, whole brains and skeletal muscle from late-stage Ndufs4 mice and age/sex-matched controls were harvested for mitochondrial and cytosolic isolation. Untargeted (1)H-NMR and semi-targeted LC-MS/MS metabolomics was applied to the resulting cell fractions, whereafter important variables (VIPs) were selected by univariate statistics. A predominant increase in multiple targeted amino acids was observed in whole-brain samples, with a more prominent effect at the mitochondrial level. Similar pathways were implicated in the muscle tissue, showing a greater depletion of core metabolites with a compartment-specific distribution, however. The altered metabolites expectedly implicate altered redox homeostasis, alternate RC fueling, one-carbon metabolism, urea cycling and dysregulated proteostasis to different degrees in the analyzed tissues. A first application of EDTA-chelated magnesium and calcium measurement by NMR also revealed tissue- and compartment-specific alterations, implicating stress response-related calcium redistribution between neural cell compartments, as well as whole-cell muscle magnesium depletion. Altogether, these results confirm the ability of compartment-specific metabolomics to capture known alterations related to Ndufs4 KO and CID while proving its worth in elucidating metabolic compartmentalization in said pathways that went undetected in the diluted whole-cell samples previously studied.
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spelling pubmed-85377442021-10-24 Sub-Cellular Metabolomics Contributes Mitochondria-Specific Metabolic Insights to a Mouse Model of Leigh Syndrome van der Walt, Gunter Lindeque, Jeremie Z. Mason, Shayne Louw, Roan Metabolites Article Direct injury of mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) complex I by Ndufs4 subunit mutations results in complex I deficiency (CID) and a progressive encephalomyopathy, known as Leigh syndrome. While mitochondrial, cytosolic and multi-organelle pathways are known to be involved in the neuromuscular LS pathogenesis, compartment-specific metabolomics has, to date, not been applied to murine models of CID. We thus hypothesized that sub-cellular metabolomics would be able to contribute organelle-specific insights to known Ndufs4 metabolic perturbations. To that end, whole brains and skeletal muscle from late-stage Ndufs4 mice and age/sex-matched controls were harvested for mitochondrial and cytosolic isolation. Untargeted (1)H-NMR and semi-targeted LC-MS/MS metabolomics was applied to the resulting cell fractions, whereafter important variables (VIPs) were selected by univariate statistics. A predominant increase in multiple targeted amino acids was observed in whole-brain samples, with a more prominent effect at the mitochondrial level. Similar pathways were implicated in the muscle tissue, showing a greater depletion of core metabolites with a compartment-specific distribution, however. The altered metabolites expectedly implicate altered redox homeostasis, alternate RC fueling, one-carbon metabolism, urea cycling and dysregulated proteostasis to different degrees in the analyzed tissues. A first application of EDTA-chelated magnesium and calcium measurement by NMR also revealed tissue- and compartment-specific alterations, implicating stress response-related calcium redistribution between neural cell compartments, as well as whole-cell muscle magnesium depletion. Altogether, these results confirm the ability of compartment-specific metabolomics to capture known alterations related to Ndufs4 KO and CID while proving its worth in elucidating metabolic compartmentalization in said pathways that went undetected in the diluted whole-cell samples previously studied. MDPI 2021-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8537744/ /pubmed/34677373 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11100658 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
van der Walt, Gunter
Lindeque, Jeremie Z.
Mason, Shayne
Louw, Roan
Sub-Cellular Metabolomics Contributes Mitochondria-Specific Metabolic Insights to a Mouse Model of Leigh Syndrome
title Sub-Cellular Metabolomics Contributes Mitochondria-Specific Metabolic Insights to a Mouse Model of Leigh Syndrome
title_full Sub-Cellular Metabolomics Contributes Mitochondria-Specific Metabolic Insights to a Mouse Model of Leigh Syndrome
title_fullStr Sub-Cellular Metabolomics Contributes Mitochondria-Specific Metabolic Insights to a Mouse Model of Leigh Syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Sub-Cellular Metabolomics Contributes Mitochondria-Specific Metabolic Insights to a Mouse Model of Leigh Syndrome
title_short Sub-Cellular Metabolomics Contributes Mitochondria-Specific Metabolic Insights to a Mouse Model of Leigh Syndrome
title_sort sub-cellular metabolomics contributes mitochondria-specific metabolic insights to a mouse model of leigh syndrome
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8537744/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34677373
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11100658
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