A multitude of natural and artificial compounds have been recognized to modulate autophagy, providing direct or, through associated pathways, indirect entry points to activation and inhibition. While these pharmacological tools are extremely useful in the study of autophagy, their abundance also suggests the potential presence of unidentified autophagic modulators that may interfere with experimental designs if applied unknowingly. Here, we report unanticipated effects on autophagy and bioenergetics in neuronal progenitor cells (NPCs) incubated with the widely used lipid-based transfection reagent lipofectamine (LF), which induced mitochondria depolarization followed by disruption of electron transport. When NPCs were exposed to LF for 5 h followed by 24, 48, and 72 h in LF-free media, an immediate increase in mitochondrial ROS production and nitrotyrosine formation was observed. These events were accompanied by disrupted mitophagy (accumulation of dysfunctional and damaged mitochondria, and of LC3II and p62), in an mTOR- and AMPK-independent manner, and despite the increased mitochondrial PINK1 (PTEN-inducible kinase 1) localization. Evidence supported a role for a p53-mediated abrogation of parkin translocation and/or abrogation of membrane fusion between autophagosome and lysosomes. While most of the outcomes were LF-specific, only two were shared by OptiMEM exposure (with no serum and reduced glucose levels) albeit at lower extents. Taken together, our findings show that the use of transfection reagents requires critical evaluation with respect to consequences for overall cellular health, particularly in experiments designed to address autophagy-inducing effects and/or energy stress.
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Cover Image
Cover Image
An outer membrane barrel assembly machinery (BAM) is in the bacterial outer membrane (between the red and blue plates). The BAM machinery contains one outer membrane protein BamA (green) and four lipoproteins BamB (yellow), BamC (magnet), BamD (orange) and BamC (cyan), which is responsible for insertion and assembly unfolded outer membrane proteins into the outer membrane. Please see article by Dong et al, pages 3951–3961 for further details. Image kindly provided by Changjiang Dong.
Lipid-based DNA/siRNA transfection agents disrupt neuronal bioenergetics and mitophagy
Eleonora Napoli, Siming Liu, Ilaria Marsilio, Konstantinos Zarbalis, Cecilia Giulivi; Lipid-based DNA/siRNA transfection agents disrupt neuronal bioenergetics and mitophagy. Biochem J 1 December 2017; 474 (23): 3887–3902. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BCJ20170632
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