Reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) fluorescence lifetime has been broadly used as a metabolic indicator for stem cell imaging. However, the direct relationship between NADH fluorescence lifetime and metabolic pathway and activity remains to be clarified. In this study, we measured the NADH fluorescence lifetime of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) as well as the metabolic indictors, such as adenosine triphosphate (ATP) level, oxygen consumption, and lactate release, up to 4 weeks under normal osteogenic differentiation and oxidative phosphorylation-attenuated/inhibited differentiation by oligomycin A (OA) treatment. NADH fluorescence lifetime was positively correlated with oxygen consumption and ATP level during energy transformation from glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation. Under OA treatment, oxidative phosphorylation was attenuated/inhibited (i.e., oxygen consumption remained the same as controls or lower), cells showed attenuated differentiation under glycolysis, and NADH fluorescence lifetime change was not detected. Increased expression of the overall complex proteins was observed in addition to Complex I. We suggested special caution needs to be exercised while interpreting NADH fluorescence lifetime signal in terms of stem cell differentiation.
In vivo noninvasive detection of apoptosis represents a new tool that may yield a more definite diagnosis, a more accurate prognosis, and help improve therapies for human diseases. The intrinsic fluorescence of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) may be a potential optical biomarker for the apoptosis detection because NADH is involved in the respiration for the mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ) formation and adenosine-5′-triphosphate (ATP) synthesis, and the depletion of ΔΨ and ATP level is the hallmark of apoptosis. We have previously observed the NADH fluorescence lifetime change is associated with staurosporine (STS)-induced mitochondria-mediated apoptosis. However, its relationship with mitochondrial functions such as ΔΨ, ATP, and oxygen consumption rate is not clear. In this study, we investigated this relationship. Our results indicate that the NADH fluorescence lifetime increased when ΔΨ and ATP levels were equal to or higher than their values of controls and decreased before the depletion of ΔΨ and ATP, and the oxygen consumption rate did not change. These findings suggest that the increased NADH fluorescence lifetime in STS-induced cell death occurred before the depletion of ΔΨ and ATP and activation of caspase 3, and was not simply caused by cellular metabolic change. Furthermore, the NADH fluorescence lifetime change is associated with the pace of apoptosis.
Fluorescence lifetime of NADH had been used as an optical marker for monitoring cellular metabolism. In our pervious
studies, we have demonstrated that NADH lifetime of hMSCs increase gradually with time of osteogenic differentiation.
In this study, we measured NADH lifetime of hMSCs from a different donor as well as the corresponding metabolic
indices such as ATP level, oxygen consumption and lactate release. We also measure the quantity of Complex I, III, IV
and V. The results show that during differentiation more oxygen consumed, higher ATP level expressed and less lactate
released, and the increase of NADH lifetime was associated with ATP level. Higher expression of the total Complex
protein was observed at 3 and 4 weeks after differentiation than controls. However, Complex I expression did not show
significant correlation with the increase of NADH fluorescence lifetime. In summary, we demonstrated that the change
of NADH lifetime was associated with the metabolic change during osteogenic differentiation of hMSCs. The increase
of NADH lifetime was in part due to the increased Complex protein interaction in mitochondria after differentiation.
Direct monitoring of cell death (i.e., apoptosis and necrosis) during or shortly after treatment is desirable in all cancer therapies to determine the outcome. Further differentiation of apoptosis from necrosis is crucial to optimize apoptosis-favored treatment protocols. We investigated the potential modality of using tissue intrinsic fluorescence chromophore, reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH), for cell death detection. We imaged the fluorescence lifetime changes of NADH before and after staurosporine (STS)-induced mitochondria-mediated apoptosis and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-induced necrosis, respectively, using two-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging in live HeLa cells and 143B osteosarcoma. Time-lapsed lifetime images were acquired at the same site of cells. In untreated cells, the average lifetime of NADH fluorescence was ~1.3 ns. The NADH average fluorescence lifetime increased to ~3.5 ns within 15 min after 1 µM STS treatment and gradually decreased thereafter. The NADH fluorescence intensity increased within 15 min. In contrast, no significant dynamic lifetime change was found in cells treated with 1 mM H2O2. Our findings suggest that monitoring the NADH fluorescence lifetime may be a valuable noninvasive tool to detect apoptosis and distinguish apoptosis from necrosis for the optimization of apoptosis-favored treatment protocols and other clinical applications.
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