A molecular rotor FLIM probe reveals dynamic coupling between mitochondrial inner membrane fluidity and cellular respiration

Author:

Singh Gaurav1ORCID,George Geen1,Raja Sufi O.2ORCID,Kandaswamy Ponnuvel1,Kumar Manoj3ORCID,Thutupalli Shashi34ORCID,Laxman Sunil1ORCID,Gulyani Akash12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine, 560065 Bangalore, India

2. Department of Biochemistry, School of Life Sciences, University of Hyderabad, 500046 Hyderabad, India

3. Simons Centre for the Study of Living Machines, National Centre for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, 560065 Bangalore, India

4. International Centre for Theoretical Sciences, Tata Institute for Fundamental Research, 560089 Bangalore, India

Abstract

The inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM), housing components of the electron transport chain (ETC), is the site for respiration. The ETC relies on mobile carriers; therefore, it has long been argued that the fluidity of the densely packed IMM can potentially influence ETC flux and cell physiology. However, it is unclear if cells temporally modulate IMM fluidity upon metabolic or other stimulation. Using a photostable, red-shifted, cell-permeable molecular-rotor, Mitorotor-1, we present a multiplexed approach for quantitatively mapping IMM fluidity in living cells. This reveals IMM fluidity to be linked to cellular-respiration and responsive to stimuli. Multiple approaches combining in vitro experiments and live-cell fluorescence (FLIM) lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) show Mitorotor-1 to robustly report IMM ‘microviscosity’/fluidity through changes in molecular free volume. Interestingly, external osmotic stimuli cause controlled swelling/compaction of mitochondria, thereby revealing a graded Mitorotor-1 response to IMM microviscosity. Lateral diffusion measurements of IMM correlate with microviscosity reported via Mitorotor-1 FLIM-lifetime, showing convergence of independent approaches for measuring IMM local-order. Mitorotor-1 FLIM reveals mitochondrial heterogeneity in IMM fluidity; between-and-within cells and across single mitochondrion. Multiplexed FLIM lifetime imaging of Mitorotor-1 and NADH autofluorescence reveals that IMM fluidity positively correlates with respiration, across individual cells. Remarkably, we find that stimulating respiration, through nutrient deprivation or chemically, also leads to increase in IMM fluidity. These data suggest that modulating IMM fluidity supports enhanced respiratory flux. Our study presents a robust method for measuring IMM fluidity and suggests a dynamic regulatory paradigm of modulating IMM local order on changing metabolic demand.

Funder

Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, India

University of Hyderabad

Simons Foundation

Human Frontier Science Program

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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