The methods presented provide step-by-step instructions for the performance of a collection of microplate based respirometric assays using isolated mitochondria from minimal quantities of mouse skeletal muscle. These assays are able to measure mechanistic changes/adaptations in mitochondrial oxygen consumption in a commonly used animal model.
Skeletal muscle mitochondria play a specific role in many disease pathologies. As such, the measurement of oxygen consumption as an indicator of mitochondrial function in this tissue has become more prevalent. Although many technologies and assays exist that measure mitochondrial respiratory pathways in a variety of cells, tissue and species, there is currently a void in the literature in regards to the compilation of these assays using isolated mitochondria from mouse skeletal muscle for use in microplate based technologies. Importantly, the use of microplate based respirometric assays is growing among mitochondrial biologists as it allows for high throughput measurements using minimal quantities of isolated mitochondria. Therefore, a collection of microplate based respirometric assays were developed that are able to assess mechanistic changes/adaptations in oxygen consumption in a commonly used animal model. The methods presented herein provide step-by-step instructions to perform these assays with an optimal amount of mitochondrial protein and reagents, and high precision as evidenced by the minimal variance across the dynamic range of each assay.
The main physiological role of skeletal muscle mitochondria is to produce ATP from oxidative phosphorylation1. Importantly, skeletal muscle mitochondria play a specific role in exercise capacity2, aging3, degenerative disease4 and Type II diabetes5. As an aging society, and Type II Diabetes being the 7th leading cause of death in the United States6, the need for methods that assess mitochondrial function has become increasingly more prevalent in biomedical research7,8. Specifically, the measurement of oxygen consumption has exceptional utility in the assessment of mitochondrial function since it represents the coordinated function between mitochondrial and nuclear genomes to express functional components of oxidative phosphorylation9.
Several technologies exist that enable the measurement of oxygen consumption in intact cells and isolated mitochondria7-10. In addition, assays have been developed for multiple cell types and tissues, and in a variety of species that allow for the measurement of mitochondrial pathways and respiratory control9,11,12. However, there is currently a void in the literature in regards to the compilation of all of these assays using isolated mitochondria from mouse skeletal muscle for use in microplate based oxygen consumption technologies. Importantly, use of microplate based respirometric assays is growing among mitochondrial biologists and allows for high throughput measurements using minimal quantities of isolated mitochondria9. Therefore, a collection of microplate based respirometric assays were developed that allow pinpointing of where abnormalities and/or adaptations may be occurring in the electron transport chain (ETC). In addition, two additional microplate based respirometric assays were developed that enable the assessment of the coordination between the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and the ETC, and between ß-oxidation and the ETC. Importantly, the presented methods provide a clear and concise way to measure mechanistic changes in mitochondrial function in a commonly used animal model.
NOTE: This protocol begins after one has isolated mitochondria from red skeletal muscle. Mitochondria were isolated as previously described from ~ 75 – 100 mg of red skeletal muscle13. Between 5 – 10 µg/µl of mitochondrial protein will be attained from this amount of tissue by resuspending the final mitochondrial pellet in ≤50 µl of isolation buffer for mitochondria (IBM) 2 (See Frisard et al13).
1. Setup
2. The Assay Run
Figure 1 represents oxygen consumption rates (OCR) for the pyruvate/malate, succinate/rotenone, palmitoyl carnitine/malate, and glutamate/malate assays (Coupling Assays). These assay tracings are displayed as Oxygen Consumption Rate, or OCR, vs. time, are background correceted, and are displayed as point-to-point rates. Each panel represents oxygen consumption in different mitochondrial states as described by Chance and Williams14. The first panel represents basal oxygen consumption, or State 2. The second panel, after injection of ADP, represents maximal coupled respiration, or State 3. The third panel, after injection of oligomycin A (an inhibitor of Complex V), represents respiration due to proton leak, or State 4o. The fourth panel, after injection of FCCP, represents maximal uncoupled respiration, or State 3u. Finally, the fifth panel, after injection of Antimycin A, represents the inhibition of oxidative respiration. Notably, all mitochondrial states have minimal standard deviation. This is due to thorough mixing of the mitochondrial stock and the mitochondria/substrate mixes, and the attainment of a single monolayer of mitochondria after the adherence spin (Step 2.6). On the other hand, loading unequal mitochondria in each well and not attaining a single monolayer of mitochondria in the well of the microplate leads to increased standard deviation in each state as displayed in Figure 2.
The tracings in Figure 1 display plateaus for each mitochondrial state and for each substrate. The plateau attained after two measurement cycles suggests good mitochondrial quality and that the mitochondria remain adhered to the well throughout the duration of the assay. In addition, the attainment of plateaued maximal rates may be more desirable since this allows the researcher to take the average OCR at these mitochondrial states, thus reducing bias that may occur by arbitrarily selecting a point.
The amount of mitochondria per well was determined by optimization trials. The optimal amount of mitochondria per well should result in State 2 rates between 100-200 pmol/min/well and state 3 rates < 1,500 pmol/min/well, since these values are within the dynamic oxygen sensing range of the multi-well oxygen consumption measurement machine. Loading too much mitochondrial protein per well may result in OCRs beyond the dynamic range of the instrument (Figure 3A). Figure 3 depicts loading 3.5 µg of mitochondrial protein per well (blue tracing) compared to loading 2.5 µg of mitochondrial protein per well (red tracing) for the succinate/rotenone assay. Loading too much mitochondrial protein per well can also lead to the exhaustion of oxygen within the microchamber of the well, thus preventing accurate measurement of OCR for each successive measurement9 (Figure 3B). Point-to-point OCR is the instantaneous rate of change of the OCR. If flat, the OCR is steady/stable, but if decreasing, then there may be a biologic or technical issue. The steep decline in OCR in State 3 and State 3u respiration (Figure 3A) is caused by the mitochondria exhausting the oxygen supply before the end of the measurement (Figure 3B).
Figure 4 represents OCR vs. time for the electron flow assay. The tracing is corrected and displayed as described for Figure 1. The first panel in this assay represents State 3u respiration on pyruvate/malate via Complex I. The second panel, after injection of rotenone, represents inhibition of Complex I mediated respiration. The third panel, after injection of succinate, represents substrate stimulated State 3u with electrons entering the ETC at Complex II (Complex II mediated respiration). The fourth panel, after injection of Antimycin A, represents inhibition of Complex III and thus total respiration. Finally, the fifth panel, after injection of ascorbate/TMPD, represents Complex IV mediated respiration. Similar to the tracings in Figure 1, all mitochondrial states have minimal standard deviation, and each rate has or nearly has attained a plateau.
Figure 1. Coupling Assays. (A) 10 mM Pyruvate/ 5 mM malate, (B) 10 mM succinate/ 2 µM rotenone, (C) 40 µM palmitoyl carnitine/ 1 mM malate, and (D) 10 mM glutamate/ 10 mM malate coupled mitochondrial respiration assay tracings as determined by multi-well measurement of oxygen consumption. Values are expressed as mean ± SD. Mitochondrial protein loaded per well was 3.5 µg for all assays except succinate/rotenone, which utilizes 2.5 µg of mitochondrial protein per well. Data represents n=3 paired biological replicates. OCR = Oxygen Consumption Rate; ADP = Adenosine diphosphate; Oligo = Oligomycin A; FCCP = Carbonyl cyanide-4– (trifluoromethoxy) phenylhydrazone; Anti-A = Antimycin A; PYR = Pyruvate; SUCC = Succinate; ROT = Rotenone; PAL-C = palmitoyl carnitine; GLUT = glutamate. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Highly Variable Pyruvate/Malate Assay. Highly variable 10 mM pyruvate/ 5 mM malate assay caused by incompletely mixing mitochondria from the mitochondrial stock in the substrate/MAS mix, thus leading to variable mitochondrial protein loading in each well. Mitochondrial protein loaded per well was 3.5 µg. Data represents n=3 paired biological replicates. OCR=Oxygen Consumption Rate; ADP= Adenosine diphosphate; Oligo= Oligomycin A; FCCP= Carbonyl cyanide-4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone; Anti-A= Antimycin A; PYR=Pyruvate. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Overloading Mitochondrial Protein for the Succinate/Rotenone Assay. (A) Oxygen consumption rates outside the dynamic range of the multi-well oxygen consumption measurement machine caused by loading 3.5 µg of mitochondrial protein per well (blue tracing) compared to loading 2.5 µg of mitochondrial protein per well (red tracing). (B) Oxygen tension approaching zero following ADP and FCCP injections caused by loading excessive mitochondrial protein (3.5 µg) per well (blue tracing) compared to loading an optimal amount (2.5 µg) of mitochondrial protein per well (red tracing). Data represents n = 3 paired biological replicates per mitochondrial protein amount. OCR = Oxygen Consumption Rate; ADP = Adenosine diphosphate; Oligo = Oligomycin A; FCCP = Carbonyl cyanide-4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone; Anti-A = Antimycin A; SUCC = Succinate; ROT = Rotenone; O2 = Oxygen; mm Hg = millimeters of mercury. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Electron Flow Assay. 5 mM pyruvate/ 1 mM malate+ 4 µM FCCP, electron flow mitochondrial respiration assay tracing as determined by multi-well measurement of oxygen consumption. Values are expressed as mean ± SD. Mitochondrial protein loaded per well was 3.5 µg. Data represents n=3 paired biological replicates. OCR = Oxygen Consumption Rate; Anti-A = Antimycin A; Asc = Ascorbate; TMPD = N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Reagent | Stock Concentration | MW | Final Volume | Mass Added | Comments/Description |
(M) | (g/mol) | (ml) | (g or ml) | ||
EGTA, pH 7.2 | 0.1 | 380.35 | 100 ml of 1M Tris Base | 3.801 g | Store at 4 °C |
HEPES | 1 | 238.3 | 250 ml of DiH2O | 59. 57 g | Store at 4 °C |
MgCl2, hexahydrate | 1 | 203.31 | 250 ml of DiH2O | 50.82 g | Store at 4 °C |
Pyruvate pH 7.4 | 0.1 | 88.06 (Comes as 14.11 M solution) | 40 ml of DiH2O | 0.283 ml of pyruvic acid | Make 1 ml aliquots and store at -20 °C, make fresh every two weeks |
Succinate pH 7.4 | 0.5 | 118.09 | 100 ml of DiH2O | 9.4 g of succinic acid | Make 1 ml aliquots and store at -20 °C |
Malate, pH 7.4 | 0.5 | 134.09 | 100 ml of 95% Ethanol | 6.7 g of malic acid | Make 200 μl aliquots and store at -20 °C |
TMPD | 0.01 | 164.25 | 10 ml | 0.0164 g | Make 300 μl aliquots and store at -20 °C; Mix with an equimolar amount of ascorbate to keep TMPD reduced |
Palmitoyl L-carnitine chloride | 0.01 | 436.07 | 1.14 ml of 95% Ethanol | 0.005 g | Make 40 μl aliquots and store at -20 °C |
Oligomycin A | 0.006 | 791.06 | 0.987 ml of 95% Ethanol | 0.005 g | Make 20 μl aliquots and store at -20 °C |
FCCP | 0.01 | 254.17 | 3.9 ml of 95% Ethanol | 0.01 g | Make 40 μl aliquots and store at -20 °C |
Rotenone | 0.001 | 394.4 | 10 ml of 95% Ethanol | 0.0039 g | Store at -20 °C |
Antimycin A | 0.005 | 548.63 | 9.12 ml of 95% Ethanol | 0.025 g | Store at -20 °C |
K+ ADP | 0.5 | 501.32 | 3.9 ml of DiH2O | 1.0 g | Store at -20 °C |
Malic Acid, pH 7.4 | 0.5 | 134.09 | 40 ml | 2.68 g | Make 200 μl aliquots and store at -20 °C |
Table 1. Stock Solutions
Reagent | Stock Concentration | Mass Added | Final Molarity/Percent |
(M) | (g or ml) | ||
Sucrose | — | 11.98 g | 70 mM |
Mannitol | — | 20.04 g | 220 mM |
Potassium phosphate monobasic | — | 0.34 g | 5 mM |
MgCl2, hexahydrate | 1 | 2.5 ml | 5 mM |
HEPES | 1 | 1.0 ml | 2 mM |
EGTA | 0.1 | 5.0 ml | 1 mM |
Essentially Fatty Acid Free- BSA | — | 1.0 g | 0.20% |
Table 2. MAS Mix. pH 7.4, 500 ml: Aliquot 25 ml and store at -20 ºC *Note: Exclude BSA for MAS mix used for assay injections.
Substrate Medium | Final Concentration | Amount of stock (µl) | Amount of MAS* (ml) |
Pyruvate/Malate | 10 mM/5 mM | Pyruvate: 1,000 | 9 |
Malate: 100 | |||
Succicinate/Rotenone | 10 mM/2 µM | Succinate: 200 | 10 |
Rotenone 20 | |||
*Pyruvate/Malate + FCCP | 5 mM/1 mM/4 µM | Pyruvate: 500 | 10 |
FCCP: 4 | |||
Malate: 20 | |||
Palmitoyl L-carnitine/Malate | 40 µM/1 mM | Palmitoylcarnitine: 40 Malate: 20 | 10 |
Glutamate/Malate | 10 mM/10 mM | Glutamate: 400 | 10 |
Malate: 200 |
Table 3. Substrate Solutions pH 7.4: Make fresh the day of the experiment. *Electron flow assay solution.
Injection Medium | Concentration | Amount of stock (µl) | Amount of MAS (ml) | Amount injected into Cartridge | Final Concentration |
(After injected in plate) | |||||
ADP | 50 mM | 300 µl | 3 | 50 µl | 5.0 mM |
Oligomycin A | 20 µM | 10 µl | 3 | 55 µl | 2.0 µM |
FCCP | 40 µM | 12 µl | 3 | 60 µl | 4.0 µM |
Antimycin A | 40 µM | 24 µl | 3 | 65 µl | 4.0 µM |
Table 4. Injections for Coupled Assays. pH 7.4: Make fresh the day of the experiment. *Coupling assays include (but are not limited to) pyruvate/malate, succinate/rotenone, palmitoyl carnitine/malate, and glutamate/malate.
Injection Medium | Concentration | Amount of stock (g or ul) | Amount of MAS (ml) | Amount injected into Cartridge | Final Concentration (After injected in plate) |
Rotenone | 20 µM | 60 µl | 3 | 50 µl | 2.0 µM |
Succinate | 50 mM | 300 µl | 3 | 55 µl | 5.0 mM |
Antimycin A | 40 µM | 24 µl | 3 | 60 µl | 4.0 µM |
TMPD/Ascorabte | 1 mM, 100 mM | TMPD : 300 µl | 3 | 65 µl | 100 µM, 10mM |
Ascorbate: 0.059 g |
Table 5. Injections for Electron Flow Assay. pH 7.4: Make fresh the day of the experiment
Command | Time (min) | # of cycles |
Calibrate | ||
Wait | 10 min (to allow plate to warm from adherence step) | |
Mix | 1 min | 2 |
Measure | 2 min | |
Inject A | ||
Mix | 1 min | 2 |
Measure | 2 min | |
Inject B | ||
Mix | 1 min | 2 |
Measure | 2 min | |
Inject C | ||
Mix | 1 min | 2 |
Measure | 2 min | |
Inject D | ||
Mix | 1 min | 2 |
Measure | 2 min |
Table 6. Instrument Run Protocol.
The methods presented in this article provide step-by-step instructions for the performance of a collection of microplate based respirometric assays using mitochondria isolated from 75 – 100 mg of mouse skeletal muscle. These assays can be performed with high precision as evidenced by the tight standard deviation between triplicate wells. Importantly, these respirometric assays allow pinpointing of where abnormalities and/or adaptations may be occurring in the ETC, TCA cycle, β-oxidation pathway, substrate transporters, etc. in a commonly used animal model.
It is important to highlight the rationale for using various fuels and inhibitors used in this protocol. The pyruvate/malate and glutamate/malate respirometric assays allow for the assessment of Complex I mediated respiration, as well as the assessment of their respective transporters, and in the case of glutamate, the deaminase15. Alternatively, the combination of succinate/rotenone allows the assessment of mitochondrial respiratory flux through Complex II of the ETC since rotenone inhibits complex I and succinate provides electrons to Complex II via the reduction of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2)15. These assays provide substrate specific information as to coupling efficiency and maximal respiration. The electron flow assay is unique in that the combination of substrates and inhibitors allows for the assessment of multiple complexes during mitochondrial respiratory flux9. The initial substrate mix of pyruvate/malate + FCCP allows for the evaluation of maximal respiration driven by Complex I, while the injection of rotenone followed by succinate allows for the assessment maximal respiration driven by Complex II. The injection of Antimycin A, an inhibitor of Complex III, followed by the injection of ascorbate/TMPD allow the for the evaluation of respiration driven by Complex IV since the Ascorbate/TMPD is an electron donor to Cytochrome C/Complex IV. While no information on coupling efficiency is obtained, the method is ideal for very small sample sizes that preclude running multiple substrates independently. Finally, the use of palmitoyl carnitine/malate allows for the assessment of the coordination between β-oxidation and the ETC since the reducing equivalent produced from the oxidation of palmitic acid (β-oxidation) feed into the ETC through the electron transferring flavoprotein15. It should be noted that the Coupling and Electron Flow assays could also be used in tandem to identify changes in mitochondrial function due to some intervention (drug treatment, genetic manipulation).
The high precision attained for these assays is primarily due to thorough mixing of the mitochondria, whether it is prior to protein determination, or with the substrate solutions. Along these lines, once the mitochondria is resuspendend in the substrate solutions, it is critical to mix this solution thoroughly prior to loading the cell culture plate as described in Step 2.2 with a widened orifice pipette tip. Failure to mix the mitochondria thoroughly will lead to large variation within the assay. In addition, using a narrow orifice pipette tip will create shearing forces while mixing the mitochondria and increases the potential to damage the mitochondrial membranes and release of Cytochrome C. The adherence step (2.7) is also a critical step in this protocol. Failure to spin the loaded cell culture plate long/fast enough will result in incomplete adherence of the mitochondria to the well, thus leading increased variability between wells and measurements.
The described protocol has been optimized to include: loading an optimal amount of mitochondrial protein per well, using the correct concentrations/preparation methods to make stock and substrate solutions, altering the assay run to ensure mitochondrial state plateaus, and appropriate mixing of the mitochondrial stock and mitochondrial/substrate mixes. Prior to these optimization efforts, the authors encountered pitfalls in the assay run. The following discusses troubleshooting methods/modifications that were helpful in optimizing this protocol. With respect to optimal loading, loading too little mitochondria will not elicit a robust response, while loading too much mitochondria will exhaust the oxygen within the microchamber and lead to inaccurate measurements. Rogers et al9 provides examples of determining optimal loading amounts of mitochondria per well for microplate based respirometric assays. More often, too much mitochondria is loaded per well as evidenced by state 2 rates over 100-200 pmol/min/well and state 3 rates >1500 pmol/min/well. If over loading occurs, perform an experiment with varying concentration of mitochondrial protein (e.g., between 1 – 10 μg) to elicit OCRs within the dynamic range of the oxygen consumption measurement machine. Preparing and using the correct concentrations of substrates and stocks is of utmost importance. Always use the acid form of substrates/injections and adjust the pH with potassium hydroxide or HCl; sodium buffers/solutions are not recommended. In addition, resuspending substrates/stocks in DMSO or 100% ethanol will result in measurement failure or error. Be sure to use 95% ethanol where noted. It is common for palmitoyl carnitine to precipitate out of the 95% ethanol after thawing the frozen stock, thus causing large variability. Be sure to warm up the palmitoyl carnitine stock and vortex well prior to use. In addition, a highly variable pyruvate/malate assay result may be due to the pyruvate stock being >2 weeks old. Be sure to remake frozen aliquots of pyruvate every 2 weeks. The assay run was modified to 2-min measurements to ensure mitochondrial state plateaus. If observation of exhaustion of ADP is desired, the researcher may extend the measurement time under the “Protocol” tab under the “Assay Wizard” forum. Finally, large variability occurs when the mitochondrial stock and mitochondria plus substrate solutions aren’t homogenized fully prior to loading. If variability between wells is high after the assay run, be sure to fully mix the substrate solution prior to the next experiment. Never vortex the mitochondria/substrate solutions, rather stir, mash, and gently triturate with a widened orifice pipette tip.
There are some limitations of this technique that are worth noting. First, the number of wells on the cell culture plate used for these assays is relatively low (i.e., 24 wells and at least 2 designated for blank wells). If it is desired to perform all 5 of these assays on one plate, the researcher is only able to examine the responses from one mouse at a time. However, it should be noted that 96 well instruments are available for higher throughput. Secondly, there are inherent strengths and weaknesses in assessing mitochondrial dysfunction in isolated mitochondria compared to in intact cells1. Some weaknesses include having less physiological relevance compared to intact cells and inducing artifacts from the isolation process. Finally, the success of this method is contingent on the quality of the mitochondrial isolation process.
Although some of these assays have been either developed in different systems or have been validated in other animal models, the methods presented herein are the first to synthesize all of the aforementioned assays for the optimal use in a multi-well oxygen consumption measurement machine using mouse skeletal muscle. Importantly, all 5 of these assays can be performed with the amount of mitochondria isolated from ~75 – 100 mg of mouse skeletal muscle, thus providing high throughput with minimal material. Of great significance, the ability of multi-well oxygen consumption technologies to perform assays with minimal quantities of mitochondria, combined with an optimized isolation method, allows the researcher to perform a multitude of other experiments with the remainder of skeletal muscle tissue (e.g., western blots, RT-PCR, enzymatic assays, etc.), which is often a struggle with this animal model.
In conclusion, the methods presented herein provide step-by-step instructions for the performance of a collection of microplate based respirometric assays using minimal quantities of mouse skeletal muscle. Importantly, the presented methods require minimal quantities of tissue and mitochondria. Once mastered, the techniques described herein will allow researchers to determine a potential mechanism of a compound or gene product on mitochondrial oxygen consumption in a commonly used animal model.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The Fralin Life Science Research Institute and The Metabolic Phenotyping Core at Virginia Tech supported this work.
Sucrose | Sigma Aldrich | S7903 | Store at room temperature |
D-Mannitol | Sigma Aldrich | 63559 | Store at room temperature |
Potassium phosphate monobasic, minimum 99.0% | Sigma Aldrich | P5379 | Store at room temperature |
Magnesium chloride hexahydrate, ACS reagent, 99.0-102.0% | Sigma Aldrich | M9272 | Store at room temperature |
HEPES minimum 99.5% titration | Sigma Aldrich | H3375 | Store at room temperature |
EGTA | Sigma Aldrich | E4378 | Store at room temperature |
Essentially Fatty | Sigma Aldrich | A6003 | Store at 4°C |
Acid Free- BSA | |||
Pyruvic Acid, 98% | Sigma Aldrich | 107360 | Store at 4°C |
Succinic Acid | Sigma Aldrich | S9512 | Store at room temperature |
L(-) Malic Acid, BioXtra, ≥95% | Sigma Aldrich | M6413 | Store at room temperature |
L-Glutamic acid | Sigma Aldrich | G1251 | Store at room temperature |
N,N,N′,N′-Tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine | Sigma Aldrich | T7394 | Store at room temperature |
99%, powder [TMPD] | |||
Palmitoyl L-carnitine chloride | Sigma Aldrich | P1645 | Store at -20°C |
Oligomycin A, ≥ 95% (HPLC) | Sigma Aldrich | 75351 | Store at -20°C |
Carbonyl cyanide 4-(trifluoromethoxy) | Sigma Aldrich | C2920 | Store at 2-8°C |
phenylhydrazone | |||
≥98% (TLC), powder [FCCP] | |||
Antimycin A from streptomyces sp. | Sigma Aldrich | A8674 | Store at -20°C |
Adenosine 5′-diphosphate monopotassium salt dehydrate [ADP] | Sigma Aldrich | A5285 | Store at -20°C |
Rotenone | Sigma Aldrich | R8875 | Store at room temperature |
Pierce™ BCA Protein Assay Kit | Thermo Scientific | 23225 | N/A |