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ROS generated by mitochondrial electron transport chain complexes I and III regulate differentiation of the pluripotent cell line P19

Mitochondria are essential for the viability of mammalian cells and provide a compartment for specific chemical reactions. Cellular respiration -- the main mitochondrial function -- is tightly connected with ROS production: the mitochondrial electron transport chain complexes I and III are the main ROS sources in mammalian cells. It has been reported that complex I and complex III activities are essential for cell cycle, apoptosis and stem cell differentiation (Spitkovsky et al., 2004; Varum et al., 2009; Lee et al., 2011; Ma et al., 2011; Tormos et al., 2012).

In our work, we aimed to investigate the role of mitochondrial electron transport chain activity in the regulation of the differentiation potential and to unravel signaling pathways that could participate in this regulation. As a model, we used the P19 pluripotent stem cell line that can be easily differentiated into trophoblasts, expressing intermediate filaments cytokeratin 8/18, and neurons, which express cytoskeleton protein beta-III-tubulin.

We first showed that both trophoblast and neural differentiation of P19 cells were accompanied by activation of cellular respiration. The analysis of respiratory chain complexes and supercomplexes, however, showed that undifferentiated P19 cells, as well as their differentiated derivatives did not differ in their respiratory machinery, including functional respirasomes. While undifferentiated cells did not use respiration as the main energy source, cellular respiration was activated during differentiation, indicating that oxidative metabolism was important for efficient differentiation.

To investigate the potential role of mitochondrial electron transport chain activity we monitored the influence of a disrupted electron flow on the differentiation of P19 cells. We found that the activity of complex I and complex III influenced the differentiation potential of the pluripotent P19 cell line: the presence of complex I and complex III inhibitors rotenone, antimycin A, or myxothiazol increased the amount of cytokeratin 8/18+ cells during trophoblast differentiation, but almost completely prevented the formation of neuron-like beta-III-tubulin+ cells during neuron differentiation. Moreover, a low oxygen level (1 % O2 vs 21 % O2 in atmosphere) - the final electron acceptor - had the same effect on differentiation. These data suggest that mitochondrial electron transport chain activity contributes to the regulation of differentiation.

The presence of complex I and complex III inhibitors, as well as oxygen scarcity, increase ROS production. We suggested that increased ROS level could explain the observed effects. By visualizing mitochondrial superoxide production with a specific dye – MitoSox - we confirmed that rotenone, antimycin A, myxothiazol, as well as low oxygen conditions, increased the superoxide level. These results suggest that the observed changes of the differentiation potential of P19 cells are associated with ROS production. To prove this idea, we differentiated P19 cells in presence of paraquat – a known ROS inducer. In line with our hypothesis paraquat promoted trophoblast differentiation. The received results suggest that the mitochondrial electron transport chain activity regulates differentiation through the ROS level.

ROS are secondary messengers that participate in numerous processes including cell proliferation and differentiation. We aimed to predict the signal pathway that connects ROS level in stem cells and their differentiation potential. For this purpose, we performed a microarray analysis and compared the gene expression profiles of cells grown under hypoxia or in the presence of the complex III inhibitor myxothiazol with untreated control cells. The expression analysis revealed p53 as a transcriptional factor that impacts the differentiation potential in treated cells. p53 is a known redox-sensing molecule (Bigarella et al., 2014) that influences the differentiation potential through cell cycle control (Maimets et al., 2008). This observation is in line with our results and suggests that p53 may regulate the differentiation potential of P19 cells. We are planning to investigate the role of p53 signaling in the regulation of cell cycle and differentiation potential of P19 cell line.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:DRESDEN/oai:qucosa.de:bsz:14-qucosa-233704
Date13 March 2018
CreatorsPashkovskaia, Natalia
ContributorsTechnische Universität Dresden, Fakultät Mathematik und Naturwissenschaften, Prof. Dr. Gerhard Rödel, Prof. Dr. Gerhard Rödel, Prof. Dr. Ben Wielockx
PublisherSaechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden
Source SetsHochschulschriftenserver (HSSS) der SLUB Dresden
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typedoc-type:doctoralThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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