Abstract

Mitochondrial fatty acid β-oxidation (FAO) plays a key role in energy homeostasis. Several FAO evaluation methods are currently available, but they are not necessarily suitable for capturing the dynamics of FAO in vivo at a cellular-level spatial resolution and seconds-level time resolution. FAOBlue is a coumarin-based probe that undergoes β-oxidation to produce a fluorescent substrate, 7-hydroxycoumarin-3-(N-(2-hydroxyethyl))-carboxamide (7-HC). After confirming that 7-HC could be specifically detected using multiphoton microscopy at excitation/emission wavelength = 820/415-485 nm, wild-type C57BL/6 mice were randomly divided into control, pemafibrate, fasting (24 or 72 h), and etomoxir groups. These mice received a single intravenous injection of FAOBlue. FAO activities in the liver of these mice were visualized using multiphoton microscopy at 4.2 s/frame. These approaches could visualize the difference in FAO activities between periportal and pericentral hepatocytes in the control, pemafibrate, and fasting groups. FAO velocity, which was expressed by the maximum slope of the fluorescence intensity curve, was accelerated in the pemafibrate and 72-h fasting groups both in the periportal and the pericentral hepatocytes in comparison with the control group. Our approach revealed differences in the FAO activation mode by the two stimuli, i.e., pemafibrate and fasting, with pemafibrate accelerating the time of first detection of FAO-derived fluorescence. No increase in the fluorescence was observed in etomoxir-pretreated mice, confirming that FAOBlue specifically detected FAO in vivo. Thus, FAOBlue is useful for visualizing in vivo liver FAO dynamics at the single-cell-level spatial resolution and seconds-level time resolution.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Fatty acid β-oxidation (FAO) plays a key role in energy homeostasis. Here, the authors established a strategy for visualizing FAO activity in vivo at the cellular-level spatial resolution and seconds-level time resolution in mice. Quantitative analysis revealed spatiotemporal heterogeneity in hepatic FAO dynamics. Our method is widely applicable because it is simple and uses a multiphoton microscope to observe the FAOBlue-injected mice.

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