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Successful energy shift from glycolysis to mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation in freshly isolated hepatocytes from humanized mice liver

Authors :
Akinori Takemura
Yugo Ikeyama
Kousei Ito
Shuichi Sekine
Tomoyuki Sato
Source :
Toxicology in Vitro. 65:104785
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Mitochondrial toxicity is a factor of drug-induced liver injury. Previously, we reported an in vitro rat hepatocyte assay where mitochondrial toxicity was more sensitively evaluated, using sugar resource substitution and increased oxygen supply. Although this method could be applicable to human cell-based assay, cryopreserved human hepatocyte (CHH) has some disadvantages/uncertainty, including unstable same donor supply and potential organelle damage due to cryopreservation. Herein, we compared the mitochondrial functions of freshly-isolated hepatocytes from humanized chimeric mice liver (PXB-cells) and three CHH lots to determine the better cell source for mitochondrial toxicity assay. Two CHH lots declined after replacing glucose with galactose. To confirm the shift in energy production from glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation, lactate and oxygen consumption rate (indicators of glycolytic activity and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, respectively) were measured. In PXB-cells, lactate amount decreased, while oxygen consumption in 100 min increased. These effects were less evident in CHH. The cytotoxicity of the select respiratory chain inhibitors was enhanced in PXB-cells upon sugar replacement, but no change occurred with negative control drugs (bicalutamide and metformin). Altogether, CHH was more vulnerable to sugar resource substitution than PXB-cells. The substitution activated mitochondrial function and enhanced cytotoxicity of respiratory chain inhibitors in PXB-cells.

Details

ISSN :
08872333
Volume :
65
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Toxicology in Vitro
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6fdcd6fd235f6f0ff25b9e1acb944b34
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tiv.2020.104785