Abstract

The effects of various stresses on mitochondrial activity and structure within the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardii were investigated using the fluorescent probe rhodamine 123. Within control cells, treatment with rhodamine 123 stained an intense fluorescent network, which was considered to be mitochondrial from the similarity in structure to models of mitochondria reconstructed from serial-section electron microscopy, and because this pattern of staining was abolished following the addition of metabolic inhibitors. Following osmotic shrinkage and rehydration, fragmentation of the mitochondrial network was observed within potentially viable cells. This was reversible within 1 h of resuspension in isotonic medium. Exposure of cells to hypertonic solutions of rapidly permeating compounds did not induce similar structural alterations. These changes in the mitochondria were confirmed by thin-section electron microscopy. In the presence of higher osmolalities of non-permeating compounds, which induce a greater loss of viability, rhodamine 123 stained cells uniformly. Following the osmotic stresses induced by slow rates of freezing and subsequent thawing no fragmentation in mitochondrial staining was observed. These findings demonstrate that shrinkage and rehydration may induce alterations to the structure and function of organelles and may be factors in determining cellular viability following osmotic stress.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call