Abstract

Pathophysiological meaning and the mechanism of the formation of megamitochondria (MG) induced under physiological and pathological conditions remain obscure. We now provide evidence suggesting that the MG formation may be a prerequisite for free radical-mediated apoptosis. MG were detected in primary cultured rat hepatocytes, rat liver cell lines RL-34 and IAR-20 and kidney cell line Cos-1 treated for 22 h with various chemicals known to generate free radicals: hydrazine, chloramphenicol, methyl-glyoxal-bis-guanylhydrazone, indomethacin, H 2O 2, and erythromycin using a fluorescent dye Mito Tracker Red CMXRos (CMXRos) for confocal laser microscopy and also by electron microscopy. Remarkable elevations of the intracellular level of reactive oxygen species (ROS), monitored by staining of cells with a fluorescent dye carboxy-H 2-DCFDA, were detected before MG were formed. Prolongation of the incubation time with various chemicals, specified above, for 36 h or longer has induced distinct structural changes of the cell, which characterize apoptosis: condensation of nuclei, the formation of apoptotic bodies, and the ladder formation. Cells treated with the chemicals for 22 h were arrested in G 1 phase, and apoptotic sub-G 1 populations then became gradually increased. The membrane potential of MG induced by chloramphenicol detected by CMXRos for flow cytometry was found to be decreased compared to that of mitochondria in control cells. Rates of the generation of H 2O 2 and O 2 − from MG isolated from the liver of rats treated with chloramphenicol or hydrazine were found to be lower than those of mitochondria of the liver of control animals. We suggest, based on the present results together with our previous findings, that the formation of MG may be an adaptive process at a subcellular level to unfavorable environments: when cells are exposed to excess amounts of free radicals mitochondria become enlarged decreasing the rate of oxygen consumption. Decreases in the oxygen consumption of MG may result in decreases in the rate of ROS production as shown in the present study. This will at the same time result in decreases in ATP production from MG. If cells are exposed to a large amount of free radicals beyond a certain period of time, lowered intracellular levels of ATP may result in apoptotic changes of the cell.

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