Abstract
Many neurotoxicants affect energy metabolism in man, but currently available test methods may still fail to predict mito- and neurotoxicity. We addressed this issue using LUHMES cells, i.e., human neuronal precursors that easily differentiate into mature neurons. Within the NeuriTox assay, they have been used to screen for neurotoxicants. Our new approach is based on culturing the cells in either glucose or galactose (Glc–Gal–NeuriTox) as the main carbohydrate source during toxicity testing. Using this Glc–Gal–NeuriTox assay, 52 mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial toxicants were tested. The panel of chemicals comprised 11 inhibitors of mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I (cI), 4 inhibitors of cII, 8 of cIII, and 2 of cIV; 8 toxicants were included as they are assumed to be mitochondrial uncouplers. In galactose, cells became more dependent on mitochondrial function, which made them 2–3 orders of magnitude more sensitive to various mitotoxicants. Moreover, galactose enhanced the specific neurotoxicity (destruction of neurites) compared to a general cytotoxicity (plasma membrane lysis) of the toxicants. The Glc–Gal–NeuriTox assay worked particularly well for inhibitors of cI and cIII, while the toxicity of uncouplers and non-mitochondrial toxicants did not differ significantly upon glucose ↔ galactose exchange. As a secondary assay, we developed a method to quantify the inhibition of all mitochondrial respiratory chain functions/complexes in LUHMES cells. The combination of the Glc–Gal–NeuriTox neurotoxicity screening assay with the mechanistic follow up of target site identification allowed both, a more sensitive detection of neurotoxicants and a sharper definition of the mode of action of mitochondrial toxicants.
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Introduction
Specific identification of neurotoxicants still remains a problem to be solved, and assay conditions need to be optimized to increase the sensitivity of the available in vitro tests (Schmidt et al. 2017; van Thriel et al. 2017). The metabolic situation of a given cell type is one of the parameters that may be tuned as it is known to be one of the key determinants affecting the type and extent of toxicity triggered by a chemical (Delp et al. 2018a; Latta et al. 2000; Leist et al. 1997b, 1999; Volbracht et al. 1999). Replacement of glucose for galactose in cell culture media was reported to tune cellular metabolism from a primary glycolytic to a predominantly mitochondrial phenotype without impairing ATP production (Reitzer et al. 1979; Robinson et al. 1992).
Mitochondria are key organelles of eukaryotic cells, best known for their central role in energy homeostasis (Zhang and Avalos 2017). However, their failure also affects other cell functions, such as calcium signaling (Huang et al. 2017; Leist and Nicotera 1998), (phospho)lipid metabolism (Wajner and Amaral 2015), neurotransmitter turnover (Leist et al. 1998; Nicotera et al. 1999), amino acid metabolism including urea generation (Porporato et al. 2016) and steroid metabolism (Martin et al. 2016). Mitochondrial dysfunctions may therefore have largely different manifestations in different tissues and metabolic situations. Moreover, such defects may escape detection in commonly used toxicological models due to the compensatory capacities that are often seen in animal models (Blomme and Will 2016). Also, most commonly used cell cultures lack sensitivity, as culture media contain frequently supra-physiological amounts of glucose, and thereby facilitate aerobic glycolysis instead of mitochondrial activity for energy production (Jones and Bianchi 2015; Lunt and Vander Heiden 2011; Reitzer et al. 1979).
Considering the difficulties of detecting mitochondrial toxicity (mitotoxicity) in rodents, it is not surprising that many drugs that had to be withdrawn from the market (e.g., troglitazone and cerivastatin), had later been linked to mitotoxicity (Blomme and Will 2016; Tirmenstein et al. 2002; Westwood et al. 2005). Indeed, a sizable fraction of compounds causing, e.g., drug-induced liver injury are mitotoxicants (Aleo et al. 2014; Begriche et al. 2011; Pessayre et al. 2012; Rana et al. 2018; Tilmant et al. 2018).
The need to obtain data on mitochondrial toxicity has been realized in several large European research projects (Desprez et al. 2018; Dragovic et al. 2016; Jennings et al. 2014; Kinsner-Ovaskainen et al. 2013; Kohonen et al. 2017; Wolters et al. 2018) as well as by the Tox21 program (Attene-Ramos et al. 2015; Xia et al. 2018).
During the past 2 decades, technologies have become available that allow the investigation of cellular oxygen consumption for large numbers of samples. Examples are the Agilent Seahorse devices, with sensors fixed to dedicated plates (Nadanaciva et al. 2012) or various methods using soluble sensors to be added to the cell cultures (Gerencser et al. 2009; O’Riordan et al. 2007). Optimized protocols to permeabilize cells allow detailed studies on individual mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes without the need to isolate mitochondria from cells (Divakaruni et al. 2014; Salabei et al. 2014).
To make cell lines more dependent on mitochondrial metabolism, especially the pharmaceutical industry has developed the approach of reducing glucose availability in test systems like HepG2 hepatoma cells (Blomme and Will 2016; Kamalian et al. 2015; Marroquin et al. 2007; Will and Dykens 2014), mouse embryonal and primary human fibroblasts (Pereira et al. 2012, 2018), leukemia K562 cells (Swiss et al. 2013), or skeletal muscle cells (Dott et al. 2014).
For typical cell lines, ≥ 80% of the glucose taken up is excreted as lactate, while only 5% is oxidized in mitochondria. In cells that offered galactose (Gal) instead of glucose (Glc), glycolytic flux is largely reduced, while mitochondrial usage increases to produce sufficient ATP (Reitzer et al. 1979; Robinson et al. 1992). The original Glc–Gal assays used in toxicology, analyze the shift in cytotoxic potency of a test compound in glucose vs galactose culture conditions. More recently, the Glc–Gal assay was combined with global oxygen consumption measurements of intact cells to further verify the impairment of mitochondrial metabolism (Eakins et al. 2016). The Glc–Gal shift conditions were also exploited to identify vital OXPHOS genes and a regulatory network of them (Arroyo et al. 2016; Robinson et al. 1992).
Neurotoxicity is one of the most frequent drug side effects and involves multiple mechanisms (Bal-Price et al. 2015b; Budnitz et al. 2006). As neurons are highly mitochondria-dependent cells, they are particularly susceptible to mitochondrial toxicants (Schmidt et al. 2017). Accordingly, some of the most notorious neurotoxicants, such as carbon monoxide, nitropropionic acid, rotenone and MPP+ are mitochondrial respiratory chain inhibitors (He et al. 2017; Leist et al. 1997a, c, 1998; Levy 2017; Nicklas et al. 1985; Nicotera and Leist 1997; Schildknecht et al. 2017; Sherer et al. 2007). One of the few adverse outcome pathways (AOP) fully endorsed by the OECD has mitochondrial dysfunction as the pivotal key event (Bal-Price et al. 2018; Terron et al. 2018). Given this situation, it is surprising that only few toxicological test methods focus on the sensitive detection of mitochondrial neurotoxicants. Typical neuronal in vitro cultures are fed with high glucose concentrations, and galactose assays have so far not been established in this area.
To closer explore the role of mitochondria in neurotoxicity, the European research project EU-ToxRisk has initiated a case study (designated CS4) which investigates the propensity of various mitochondrial inhibitors to cause neurotoxicity (http://www.eu-toxrisk.eu/). Within this context, a broad panel of mitotoxicants was identified as tool compounds to trigger mechanistically diverse types of respiratory dysfunction. This set of compounds (Suppl. Item 1) was used here to refine existing human cell-based neurotoxicity assays.
The new approach methods (NAM) currently available to test neurotoxicity (Barbosa et al. 2015; Forsby et al. 2009; Gustafsson et al. 2010; Harrill et al. 2018; Hendriks et al. 2014; Schmuck and Kahl 2009; Schultz et al. 2015; Terrasso et al. 2015; Wilson et al. 2014) make use of the particular vulnerability of specific sub-populations (Zimmer et al. 2011) or they use functional readouts like specific inhibition of neurite outgrowth (Harrill et al. 2011; Hoelting et al. 2016; Krug et al. 2013), disturbance of network formation (Bal-Price et al. 2015a; Frank et al. 2017) or impaired calcium signaling (Gustafsson et al. 2010; Nordin-Andersson et al. 2003). None of these methods is particularly tuned to identify mitochondrial neurotoxicants.
Therefore, this study was initiated to modify the LUHMES cell-based NeuriTox test (Krug et al. 2013; Stiegler et al. 2011) to detect mitochondrial neurotoxicants more sensitively. The easy availability of high amounts of well-controlled neuronal cells makes the LUHMES-based assay suitable for high-throughput screening (Delp et al. 2018b; Schildknecht et al. 2013). These cells can be differentiated homogenously within 5 days into mature neurons (Scholz et al. 2011) that show high sensitivity to toxicants (Gutbier et al. 2018a, b; Tong et al. 2017, 2018; Witt et al. 2017). The conventional NeuriTox test differentiates between blunt cytotoxicity and the specific inhibition of neurite outgrowth to detect neurotoxicants (Delp et al. 2018b; Krug et al. 2013). In this study, the Glc–Gal shift was explored as expansion of the test protocol. Moreover, a secondary follow-up assay was developed to pinpoint the mode of action of mitotoxicants identified in the new Glc–Gal NeuriTox assay. The link of neurotoxicants to their inhibition of specific parts of the neuronal mitochondrial respiratory chain can be used for hit confirmation of mitotoxicity screens.
Materials and methods
Materials
Unless specified otherwise, cell culture reagents (consumables and media) were from Gibco/Thermo Fisher Scientific (Waltham, USA), and fine chemicals (inhibitors, substrates) were from Sigma-Aldrich (Steinheim, GER). Physico-chemical properties, CAS identifiers and literature references of the tested set of chemicals are compiled in Suppl. Item 1.
Assessment of neurotoxicity by human neurite outgrowth assay (NeuriTox)
LUHMES (Lund human mesencephalic) cells were cultured as previously described (Delp et al. 2018b; Krug et al. 2013; Stiegler et al. 2011). Briefly, proliferating precursor cells were kept in proliferation medium [AdvDMEM/F12 containing 2 mM l-glutamine, 1 × N2 supplement (Invitrogen)] enriched with 40 ng/ml recombinant human basic fibroblast growth factor (R+D systems) and cultured in a 5% CO2/95% air atmosphere at 37 °C. Cell culture dishes and flasks (Sarstedt) were pre-coated with 50 μg/ml poly-l-ornithine (PLO) and 1 μg/ml fibronectin (Sigma-Aldrich). Differentiation to post-mitotic neurons was performed by seeding cells at a density of 45,000 cells/cm2 kept in proliferation medium for 24 h and a subsequent medium change to differentiation medium [AdvDMEM/F12 supplemented with 2 mM l-glutamine, 1 × N2 (Invitrogen), 1 mM N6,2′-O-dibutyryl 3′,5′-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) (Sigma-Aldrich), 1 µg/ml tetracycline (Sigma-Aldrich), and 2 ng/ml recombinant human glial cell-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF, R+D Systems)]. After 48 h of differentiation, cells were detached with 0.05% trypsin/EDTA (Invitrogen) and seeded into 96 well plates at a density of 100,000 cells/cm2. In the standard NeuriTox setup, pre-differentiated cells were treated 1 h after seeding, i.e., on day 2 of differentiation (d2) for 24 h. For the assessment of neurite area on d2, directly before trypsinization, cells were pre-differentiated in 96-well plates and assayed after 48 h of differentiation.
Glc–Gal NeuriTox assay
For the modified Gal–NeuriTox assay, the cells were handled exactly in the same way, but the medium contained 18 mM galactose. To assess the difference between cells grown in glucose (Glc cells) and cells grown in galactose (Gal cells), the same proliferating precursor population was always used for parallel differentiations in the presence of either glucose (Glc medium) or galactose (Gal medium).
Image acquisition and quantification in the neurite assays
Image acquisition was performed exactly as described previously (Krug et al. 2013; Schildknecht et al. 2013; Stiegler et al. 2011). Briefly, cells were live stained with 1 µg/ml Hoechst H-33342 and 1 µM calcein-AM for image acquisition. The neurite area was calculated as the total calcein-positive area corrected for the somatic area, covered by the cell bodies. If cell densities varied from preparation to preparation (e.g., for the Glc Gal comparison of d2 cells before replating), data were compared between parallel cultures from individual preparations. The apparent neurite area per cell was smaller in high-density cultures, since neurites growing over cell bodies were excluded by the software. For statistical tests, then the pairwise mode was chosen. This was necessary as the applied image quantification algorithm requires equal cell densities. Viable cells were defined by a nucleus with overlapping calcein signal. Nuclei without calcein stain were counted as dead cells. Viability was expressed as viable cells/total cells × 100%.
Seahorse assessment of mitochondrial and glycolytic functional parameters of intact LUHMES cells
Assessment of mitochondrial and glycolytic functionality was performed exactly as described earlier (Delp et al. 2018b). Briefly, d2 LUHMES cells, already cultured for 48 h in either Glc medium or Gal medium were seeded at a density of 100,000 cells/cm2 into Agilent Seahorse XFe24 well plates. 24 h later (on d3), cells were analyzed. The “basal” respiration and acidification were measured in untreated cells; the “maximal respiration” was measured in the presence of 1.5 µM carbonyl cyanide-4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone (FCCP); the “maximal acidification” was assessed in Glc cells in the presence of 1 µM oligomycin, which blocked mitochondrial energy production and made cells 100% dependent on glycolysis for energy production. Due to the different situation in Gal cells (dependence on mitochondria), different conditions were chosen here to maximize the galactolytic flux. Mitochondria were uncoupled by 1.5 µM FCCP to allow a maximal metabolism of pyruvate which was not secreted as lactate by these cells. Under such conditions, CO2 produced by the TCA might contribute to the acidification. Oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) were always normalized to the cell count. The latter was obtained by including 1 µg/ml H-33342 plus 1 µM calcein-AM (final concentrations on the cells) in the last Seahorse injection followed by automated image analysis as described above for the NeuriTox assay [using the Seahorse assay plates on Cellomics CellInsight (Cellomics, Waltham, MA, USA)].
Assessment of the function of individual mitochondrial complexes in permeabilized LUHMES cells
To study the inhibition of individual mitochondrial respiratory chain (MRC) complexes, proliferating LUHMES cells were seeded into Agilent Seahorse XFe24 well plates at a density of 205,000 or 135,000 cells/cm2 and were allowed to grow for 1 or 2 days in proliferation medium, respectively. They were used at 24–48 h after seeding, when they had recovered from replating and reached 95% confluency, but were not overgrown. For the assay, cells were permeabilized with MAS buffer (220 mM mannitol, 1 mM ADP, 70 mM sucrose, 10 mM KH2PO4, 5 mM MgCl2, 2 mM HEPES, 1 mM EGTA, 4 mg/ml fatty acid-free BSA, pH = 7.2) supplemented with 25 µg/ml digitonin (Salabei et al. 2014). The Seahorse measurements of OCR were started 30 min after permeabilization. The function of respiratory chain complexes was assessed by a strategy (Salabei et al. 2014) based on applying complex-specific substrates and inhibitors, with exact conditions optimized to LUHMES [cI: substrate was 5 mM Pyr, 2 mM Gln, and 2.5 mM Mal, inhibitor was 0.5 µM rotenone; cII: substrate was 10 mM succinate, inhibitor was 5 mM malonate; cIII: substrate was 250 µM duroquinol (TCI chemicals Germany, Eschborn, GER), inhibitor was 0.5 µM antimycin A; cIV: 125 µM TMPD + 2 mM ascorbic acid, no specific inhibitor was used] and the injection strategy is detailed in the results section as part of the seventh figure. Since the measurement was extremely sensitive to cell number variations, the last measurement before the injection of the test substance was used for internal normalization. For each respiratory chain complex, its activity in the presence of solvent control (DMSO) was used as reference to normalize the data for samples exposed to test substances.
Lactate quantification
To measure the lactate secretion, Glc and Gal cells were seeded at d2 into fresh (lactate free) medium and cultured for 24 h. The lactate concentration in the medium was determined by a commercially available enzymatic assay (Diaglobal LAC142 assay, Berlin, Germany) with a colorimetric endpoint. The amount of lactate produced within 24 h was normalized to the live cell count. The latter was assessed by H-33342 and calcein-AM staining as described above.
Proteasomal activity
To quantify the proteasomal activity, cells were cultured and exposed exactly in the same way as for the NeuriTox assay. Parallel plates that were not used to assess viability and neurite outgrowth were used to assess proteasomal activity. Activity measurements were performed exactly as described in (Gutbier et al. 2018b). The assay is based on the replacement of cell culture medium by HBSS buffer containing a cell permeable proteasomal substrate [MeOSuc-Gly-Leu-Phe-AMC, 25 µM (Bachem, Bubendorf, Switzerland)] after 24 h of toxicant exposure. AMC fluorescence (ex: 360 nm, em: 465 nm) was determined directly after addition of the assay buffer to the cells and after 90 min incubation. The increase in fluorescence was used as a measure of proteasomal activity.
Intracellular ATP
To assess intracellular ATP content, the plates from the NeuriTox assay were multiplexed with an ATP assay, i.e., after the image analysis on a Cellomics CellInsight, cells were lyzed within the plates. Then, ATP was measured luminometrically, using a commercial reagent mix (Promega CellTiterGlo 2.0) containing luciferase. Data were normalized to DMSO solvent control.
Quantification of aspartate and serine
Amino acids were quantified as described earlier (Delp et al. 2018a; Secker et al. 2018). Briefly, cells were lyzed on ice with 50% MeOH/H2O and the lysates were vacuum dried. After reconstitution in 2% (w/v) 5-sulfosalicylic acid/H2O (SSA), followed by a centrifugation step (20,000×g, 30 min, 4 °C), samples were subjected to a HPLC separation. For detection, a post-column ninhydrin reaction was employed that generated colorimetrically detectable amino acid derivatives that were quantified by their absorbance at 570 nm. To determine amino acid concentrations in the cell culture medium, samples from the cell culture supernatant were obtained. SSA was added to yield a final SSA concentration of 2%. Then, samples were centrifuged (30 min, 4 °C, 20,000×g) and the supernatant was mixed 1:1 with sample dilution buffer (0.12 M LiCl, pH 2.2) and analyzed as described above.
Assessment of neurotoxicity in SH-SY5Y cells
Human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells were plated in 96-well plates with micro-clear bottom (31,250 cells/cm2, Greiner) in 100 µl proliferation medium (EMEM supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 2 mM l-glutamine, 1% non-essential amino acids, 100 µg/ml streptomycin and 100 U/ml penicillin) (Gustafsson et al. 2010). Differentiation was initiated 24 h later (on day 0) by exchange to 100 µl/well differentiation medium (DMEM:F12, supplemented with 1 µM all-trans retinoic acid (RA), 1 × N2 supplement, 2 mM l-glutamine, 100 µg/ml streptomycin and 100 U/ml penicillin). All media and supplements were obtained from Gibco (ThermoFisher) except from RA (Sigma). On d3, 50% of the medium was exchanged. Conventional SH-SY5Y cultures (Glc-SH-SY5Y cells) received fresh differentiation medium on d6, together with the toxicant. Cell cultured in Gal medium (Gal-SH-SY5Y cells) received fresh Gal-differentiation medium (AdvDMEM/F12, supplemented with 1 µM RA, 2 mM l-glutamine and 18 mM galactose (Roth) instead of glucose) on d5 to allow metabolic adaptation. The cells were exposed to toxicants on d6. Test compounds were always added in 10 µl of 10 × concentrated test substances for 24 h. Subsequently, cells were stained with 5 µg/ml H-33342, and 5 µM propidium iodide (PI, Sigma) (final concentrations) to assess cell viability, i.e., the fraction of non-PI positive cells (live cells) relative to H-33342 positive cells (total cell count) by automated high content microscopy [ImageXpress Micro (Molecular Devices, UK)]. The cells were imaged using a 10 × objective lens, and the following wavelengths: H-33342 excitation 377 ± 50 nm, emission 447 ± 60 nm, 100 ms exposure time, PI excitation 562 ± 40 nm, emission 624 ± 40 nm, 400 ms exposure time.
Curve fitting, data mining and statistics
For all data shown, at least three independent experiments were performed. Each independent experiment (= biological replicate) consisted of several technical replicates. In the first data processing step, data of the technical replicates were expressed as percent of their respective solvent controls within a biological replicate. After that, technical replicates were averaged, i.e., the mean of all technical replicates of one independent experiment was used as single data point of a biological replicate. Subsequently, the mean of the ≥ 3 biological replicates was determined, and a measure of variation (SD/SEM) was calculated.
Curve fits were calculated using a four-parameter Hill model with constraints for the upper asymptote to 100% of solvent-treated samples. The equation of the Hill model was solved for f(x) = 75% or 50% to determine the EC25 or EC50, respectively, i.e., the concentration at which the neurite outgrowth inhibiting effect was at 25% or 50% of the solvent control. If not stated otherwise, data in the figures are mean ± SEM and statistical differences between the treatments and the control were evaluated by an analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Dunnett’s post hoc test (p < 0.05).
Results and discussion
Comparison of basic metabolic, morphological and functional features of cells cultured in glucose vs galactose
The most important sugar for cellular energy supply is glucose (Glc), but most cells express transporters and a metabolic machinery to use related carbohydrates. One of these is galactose (Gal), the C4 epimer of glucose. Gal and Glc are nearly identical molecules, differing only in the stereospecific conformation of the hydroxyl group at carbon atom 4 (Fig. 1a).
For energy production, all sugars are converted to one of the canonical glycolysis intermediates, and from this stage on, they all follow the same unified pathway to form pyruvate (Pyr). Gal metabolism (galactolysis) differs from Glc metabolism (classical glycolysis) only in the entry steps. Glc is directly (single enzymatic step) converted to glucose-6-phosphate (G6P), the first glycolytic metabolite; the conversion of Gal to G6P requires three enzymatic steps, plus a recycling reaction, i.e., the co-ordinate function of four enzymes. However, contrary to erroneous reports in the literature, the conversion of Glc and Gal to G6P requires the same amount of energy (i.e., one ATP per sugar). If galactolysis and glycolysis produce different amounts of ATP, then this must be for kinetic reasons, i.e., because of a different flux/speed of the final Pyr formation. Galactolytic turnover may be attenuated either due to slower import of Gal, or a less rapid conversion to G6P. The theoretical maximal yield of reducing equivalents (NADH) and energy equivalents (ATP from glycolysis and mitochondrial metabolism) is the same for the two sugars (Fig. 1b).
To test the effect of Gal vs Glc supply to neurons, the established NeuriTox test protocol was modified. In a parallel experimental setup, starting with the same proliferating culture, LUHMES cells were either differentiated in Glc or Gal-containing differentiation medium to allow a full adjustment to the metabolic conditions at the time of the toxicant treatment (i.e., on d2 of differentiation, after replating). Neurite outgrowth and general cell viability were assessed after 24 h of treatment for both assay conditions (Fig. 1c).
We expected that cells would use different strategies of ATP production, when cultured in Glc vs Gal, as described earlier for non-neuronal cells. Our assumption was that cells in Glc generate most of their ATP as well as some metabolites like serine and ribose from glycolysis. The abundant NADH and pyruvate generated by this metabolic condition are transformed to lactate, which is then secreted, and to NAD+ which allows cells further glycolytic flux. Mitochondrial metabolism, e.g., the citric acid cycle (TCA), is not primarily used for energy production (Fig. 1d). For Gal cells, we expected a shift towards a mitochondria-dominated metabolism. Under such conditions, the Pyr produced through galactolysis is used to fuel the TCA and thus respiratory generation of ATP. With a predominantly mitochondrial fate of Pyr, lactate excretion would not be required, and less carbon may be used for biosynthesis. Instead, galactolytic NADH would be transported into the mitochondria via the malate/aspartate shuttle to produce energy. Increased levels of oxaloacetate, formed from pyruvate by pyruvate carboxylase (PC), can increase the mitochondrial/cytosolic exchange of NADH. PC is known to be active in LUHMES cells (Delp et al. 2018a) and to be activated by acetyl-CoA, i.e., a metabolite likely to be increased in Gal cells (Yu et al. 2009). Thus, mitochondria are expected to serve as the main source of ATP production in cells cultured in Gal, and this may alter cellular sensitivity to mitochondrial toxicants (Fig. 1e).
To assure that the expected metabolic changes did not alter the overall phenotype, cells cultured in Glc vs Gal were characterized extensively on a morphological and functional level. Major cytoskeletal structures were chosen to characterize cellular morphology and neurite growth qualitatively. No obvious differences were observed for LUHMES cells cultured for 72 h in Glc or Gal (Fig. 2a). To obtain fully quantitative data, the outgrowth of neurites, on d2 (before re-seeding) and d3 (24 h after re-seeding, regular NeuriTox assay endpoint) of cells differentiated in Glc or Gal, was measured. No statistically significant difference between the parallel replicates was found (Fig. 2b). We also evaluated whether the cells adapted their metabolism as expected. Gal cells contained/produced more intracellular aspartate (even to a degree to export it (Suppl. Item 2)), which would support the Mal/Asp shuttle. They also contained less serine, a typical spin-off metabolite from glycolysis. These changes were in accordance with a shift from a glycolytic to a mitochondrial metabolism (Fig. 2c), possibly supported by the use of extracellular Ser from the medium for biosynthetic purposes or glycolysis (Suppl. Item 2).
It was important to verify that the two different metabolic situations both allowed LUHMES cells sufficient ATP production. We found that both cultures had the same intracellular ATP levels (Fig. 2d). To get a more direct measure of differential mitochondrial activity, we measured cellular oxygen consumption rates (indicating mitochondrial activity). As a measure of glycolytic activity, extracellular acidification rates (indicating mainly lactate secretion) were quantified. As expected, the basal respiration was doubled in Gal cells compared to normal Glc cells. Notably, the maximally possible mitochondrial respiration was not significantly affected by the Glc–Gal exchange. The Gal cells exploited their available respiratory chain function to a higher extent, and had accordingly a much lower mitochondrial spare respiratory capacity (Fig. 2e).
Vice versa, the basal glycolytic rate of Gal cells was only about 50% of that found under Glc conditions. We also tested how far glycolysis could be further accelerated under conditions of maximum demand. In Glc cells, this situation was simulated by inhibition of all residual mitochondrial ATP generation (block by oligomycin). The cells only slightly (< 25%) increased ECAR under this condition, suggesting that glycolysis was already running maximally. In Gal cells, a maximum pull of Pyr to mitochondria was generated by uncoupling (FCCP). This also did not increase ECAR largely (< 25%) and it indicated that Gal cells fully used the maximal glycolytic flux possible under the respective Gal supply (Fig. 2f). Finally, the differences in Lac secretion were assessed directly by measurement of extracellular levels of lactic acid over time. The lactate secretion rate of Gal cells was only 14% of that measured in Glc cells (Fig. 2g).
Increased sensitivity of Gal neurons for toxicity of the complex I inhibitor rotenone
To test whether the metabolic shift (Glc–Gal) affected the toxicity of mitochondrial inhibitors, the well-established complex I (cI) blocker rotenone was used. Concentration–response data for cell viability were obtained and the Glc–Gal exchange resulted in a drastic shift in sensitivity of neurons to rotenone of about three orders of magnitude (Fig. 3a). Other parameters of cellular function were even more dramatically affected by the sugar exchange. Intracellular ATP levels decreased to 50% of control at 5 nM (Gal) and at 30 µM (Glc), i.e., with a 6000-fold shift (Fig. 3b). Neurite outgrowth (neurite area) also showed a massive shift between Glc and Gal and was in both cases affected at lower concentrations than viability (Fig. 3c). As additional functional parameter, we measured proteasomal activity. In neurons, this cellular function is impaired when mitochondria are dysfunctional and ATP levels drop (Gutbier et al. 2018b; Terron et al. 2018). We found here that proteasome activity was indeed affected in a similar way as ATP levels, with an about 1000-fold offset between Glc and Gal cells (Fig. 3d). To separate non-specific toxicants from specific neurotoxicants in the NeuriTox test, the ratio of concentrations affecting neurite outgrowth and viability [e.g., EC25(V)/EC25(NA)] is calculated. If the ratio is ≥ 4, the toxicant is considered to be a specific neurotoxicant (Delp et al. 2018b; Krug et al. 2013). Under Glc and Gal conditions, rotenone exceeded that threshold strongly (Fig. 4a). The data obtained with rotenone suggest that the Glc–Gal assay can be transferred to LUHMES neurons to detect mitotoxicants more sensitively and to better separate specific neurofunctional effects from plain cytotoxicity.
Effect of a Glc–Gal exchange on neurotoxicity of diverse complex I inhibitors
To further evaluate the assay for its sensitivity to mitochondrial toxicants, a broader panel of cI inhibitors was tested. We determined for all compounds the EC25 for inhibition of neurite outgrowth (EC25(NA)) and for general cell viability (EC25(V)). From these data, we determined the ratio of EC25(V)/EC25(NA) as measure for specific neurotoxicity. In addition, we visualized for each parameter (V, NA) the shift due to the Glc–Gal exchange. For the five additional inhibitors tested (deguelin, fenazaquin, fenpyroximate, MPP+ and pyrimidifen), Gal cells were always much more sensitive for neurite damage than Glc cells (Fig. 4b–f). The same was observed for viability, with exception of MPP+. The cells were not killed by the compound. It was shown earlier that immature LUHMES (d0) are resistant to MPP+ (Efremova et al. 2015; Schildknecht et al. 2009), while the system became extremely sensitive after d5 (Krug et al. 2014; Poltl et al. 2012). The cells upregulate the dopamine transporter (DAT), which is required for MPP+ toxicity, at d2–3 (Scholz et al. 2011) and the amount of toxicant entry may not be sufficient to kill, but only to affect the more sensitive neurites. For all five compounds, Gal also increased the EC25(V/NA) ratio compared to the standard NeuriTox assay in Glc. Thus, the encouraging results obtained for rotenone were fully confirmed by the data from other cI inhibitors.
Effect of a Glc–Gal exchange on neurotoxicity of diverse complex II–V inhibitors, uncouplers and non-mitochondrial toxicants
Since mitotoxicants might not only affect cI, a set of cII, cIII, cIV and cV inhibitors, as well as uncouplers and non-mitochondrial toxicants was investigated. For cIII inhibitors (antimycin A, fenamidone, picoxystrobin and pyraclostrobin), the Glc–Gal exchange resulted in the same shift of sensitivity as observed with cI inhibitors (Fig. 5a–d), and the EC25(V/NA) ratio increased. Under these conditions (Gal), cIII inhibitors were specific neurotoxicants with the sensitivity of neurites being ≥ 4 higher than the sensitivity of overall viability.
For few cII inhibitors (carboxine and thifluzamide), Gal increased the sensitivity and neurite specificity, but the offset effects were less drastic. In the presence of Gal, two cII inhibitors became neurite specific (ratio ≥ 4) (Fig. 5e, f). The inhibitor atpenin A5 showed a high specificity in Glc and Gal conditions, but was not more potent in the presence of Gal, and flutolanil was neither enhanced, nor specific at any condition (not shown).
The two investigated cIV inhibitors azide and cyanide also displayed a higher toxicity, if the cells were cultured in Gal conditions (Fig. 5g, h). For azide, the EC25(V/NA) ratio increased to 22, while cyanide was at best borderline neurotoxic under Gal conditions (ratio 3.4).
The cV inhibitors also showed a heterogeneous response pattern: Gal cells were more sensitive to 1-octylguanidin and oligomycin than Glc cells, but sensitivity of general cell viability increased stronger then the sensitivity of the neurite outgrowth (Fig. 6a, b). A similar pattern was observed for the two uncoupling substances 2,4-dinitrophenol and FCCP (Fig. 6c, d). The activity of cV and the associated tightness of the inner mitochondrial membrane for protons are vital for proper mitochondrial function, but they are not part of the electron transfer process of the MRC. Our results suggest that the core parts of the MRC [cI, cIII, (cIV)] are more affected by Glc–Gal exchange than other mitochondrial functions. Complex II takes a special role, as it belongs to the classical MRC, but is for many metabolic situations rather a minor side entry. Besides the MRC function, it takes its major role as succinate dehydrogenase in the citric acid cycle.
To test the argument that the Glc–Gal shift specifically affects inhibitors of the MRC, we also tested toxicants with non-mitochondrial mode of action. As exemplary toxicants, a proteasome and a Rho kinase pathway inhibitor (bortezomib and narciclasine) were selected and tested. For both substances, the Glc and Gal concentration–response curves were similar (neurite outgrowth as well as viability) (Fig. 6e, f). For bortezomib, which is not a central nervous system neurotoxicant, the low EC25(V/NA) ratio was not significantly affected by Gal. Narciclasine is a specific neurotoxicant (Delp et al. 2018b; Krug et al. 2013), with a large EC25(V/NA) ratio. This was confirmed in the Gal condition.
The results indicate that the Glc–Gal assay can be used to screen substances in medium- to high-throughput screening for potential neurotoxicity and for a liability to affect the MRC. A single operator can handle 20–30 compounds per week to produce concentration–response data. This equals 400–600 data points, assessed in technical triplicates.
Since the LUHMES-based Glc–Gal assay is to our knowledge the first shift assay for neuronal cells, we were interested whether it may be transferred to other neuronal cultures. We chose SH-SY5Y cells, the most frequently used human neuronal cell line in in vitro toxicology as the alternative test system. The cells were differentiated for 5 days in Glc medium and then either kept in Glc until the end of the assay, or they were changed to Gal medium, and allowed to adapt metabolically for 24 h. Subsequently, Glc and Gal cells were treated for 24 h with toxicants (from d6 to d7) and thereafter cell viability was measured (Suppl. Item 3A). Three cI (rotenone, deguelin, tebufenpyrad) and two cIII inhibitors (antimycin A and pyraclostrobin) were investigated at a pre-determined concentration (10 µM) for their increase in toxicity in Glc vs Gal. These five substances were non-toxic (viability reduction by < 5%) in Glc conditions, due to the relatively high tolerance of the neuroblastoma cells to the neurotoxicants (Tong et al. 2017). The exchange to Gal as main sugar source in the medium, resulted in a significant increase in toxicity, i.e., viability was reduced by 15–35% of control (Suppl. Item 3B). These preliminary data suggest that the Glc–Gal-shift assay could be transferred to other neuronal test systems. However, it has to be mentioned that LUHMES cells tolerated the Gal conditions much better than the SH-SY5Y cells. LUHMES cells could easily be kept in Gal medium for more than 9 days without any increase in cell death compared to Glc conditions (not shown), whereas SH-SY5Y cells poorly tolerated culturing in Gal medium for > 48 h (fragile neurites, altered morphology; not shown).
This difference in human cell lines could be due to different expression patterns of transporters and enzymes required for Gal metabolism. Alternatively, cells may differ in their ability to increase mitochondrial metabolism in the TCA or MRC, as e.g., the malate/aspartate shuttle may have different limitations. Under sub-optimal metabolic conditions, cells would perceive Gal not as an alternative energy substrate, but as a starvation medium. We conclude that the setup of the Glc–Gal shift assay in other neuronal cells will require careful examination of their metabolic suitability, and fine tuning of the exposure scheme may be necessary to allow clear and robust results.
Confirmation of the mode of action (MoA) of test substances by direct assessment of mitochondrial respiratory chain (MRC) inhibition
The Glc–Gal NeuriTox assay obviously detected some compounds as potential MRC inhibitors (strong Glc–Gal shift), but a secondary assay with an independent endpoint would be desirable for confirmation of hits, and for exclusion of false positives. Therefore, we used LUHMES cells to implement tests for inhibition of selected mitochondrial targets (Salabei et al. 2014). As a rational for these tests, the following background information is important: (1) eukaryotic cell membranes can be selectively permeabilized (e.g., with digitonin) to deliver respiratory substrates to the mitochondria, without adversely affecting MRC function; (2) selective substrates for each of the MRC complexes I–IV are available; (3) if a more terminal MRC complex (cIII or cIV) of the MRC is directly fed electrons, the respective upstream complexes are not required for oxygen consumption; (4) tool compounds inhibiting cI–IV are available and can be used serially to analyze different mitochondrial functions within one experiment (Fig. 7a).
Based on these conditions, a two-tiered screening approach was developed to identify the mitochondrial target complex for potential neurotoxicants. In the first tier, complex I–III activity was assessed. In brief, specific cI substrates were used to assess cI activity. Subsequently, cI was inhibited and cII substrates were injected. Then, cII was blocked and selective substrates were injected to probe the activity of cIII. In the second tier, cIV was assessed by inhibition of cI and cIII and injection of a cIV substrate (Fig. 7b).
Exemplary data on MRC complex activity of mitochondria treated with highly specific tool compounds indicate the good performance of this test strategy (Fig. 7c). Complex I (rotenone) and cII inhibitors (3-nitropropionic acid) reduced selectively cI and cII activity, while the other complexes were not affected. The cIII inhibitor antimycin A did not affect complex IV activity, and caused a strong cIII inhibition. However, block of the electron flow at cIII lead to an apparent inhibition of cI and cII, since substrates feeding into these complexes could not deliver their electrons to cIV, and thus they did not promote oxygen consumption (Suppl. Item 4). The same was observed for the cIV inhibitor azide which led to an apparent cI–III inhibition. These inhibition patterns, due to the use of OCR as common endpoint for all MRC activity assays, were taken into account for the data evaluation algorithm (Fig. 7d). For the cV inhibitor oligomycin, which causes an accumulation of protons in the intermembrane space, an apparent inhibition of cI–IV was observed. Inhibition of cI activity was strongest, since electrons fed into the MRC via cI cause most protons to be pumped across the inner mitochondrial membrane (5 protons per electron, or 20 protons per O2 finally consumed). Electrons fed into the MRC via cII or cIII cause the translocation of 12 protons per O2 finally consumed, while an electron fed into the MRC via cIV causes the translocation of only 1 proton (4 electrons per O2 consumed). Therefore, the proton gradient-based resistance decreased with proximity to cIV. The uncoupler FCCP did not affect OCR driven by substrates of cII–IV. However, it increased apparent cI activity relative to control. By uncoupling the mitochondrial membrane, the proton gradient physiologically established to allow cV activity (ATP synthesis) was removed. Thus, cI worked against less resistance when pumping protons across the mitochondrial membrane.
The knowledge about the serial connection of the individual MRC complexes and the typical inhibition patterns of tool compounds lead to the development of a decision model that translates the assay data into a MoA classification (Fig. 7d). Note that the classification model uses the data in a different order than the electron flow through the MRC. This is due to the necessity to take upstream/indirect effects into account.
This screening and decision strategy was applied for 25 compounds to investigate their proposed MoA (Suppl. Item 5). For all described and tested cI inhibitors (7), a selective cI inhibition was confirmed. For four of five cII inhibitors, a selective cII inhibition was confirmed. Mepronil rather behaved like a mixed/cIII inhibitor and the discrepancy with the original literature needs to be clarified (FRAC 2011; Mitani et al. 2001; Zhang et al. 2009). Antimycin A and three strobins were confirmed as cIII inhibitors, while cyazofamid rather displayed the pattern of an uncoupling substance. Again, differences in the original literature (Dreinert et al. 2018; FRAC 2011; Li et al. 2014) may be due to technical issues, or have a biological basis, as the reference data were obtained with subcellular fractions and/or non-human species. Such model dependence has been observed earlier for, e.g., thiazolidinediones and statins, which either inhibit several mitochondrial complexes or/and uncouple the respiratory chain (Nadanaciva et al. 2007). Moreover, uncouplers like FCCP are known to lead to MRC inhibition when used at too high concentrations (Senkowski et al. 2015).
Substances not described as MRC inhibitors (e.g., colchicine or carbaryl) were clearly classified as such (non-MRC inhibitors). Interestingly, one substance (dhmtAc, ID#14) identified earlier by us as chemotherapeutic with potential neurotoxic side effects (de Souza-Fagundes et al. 2018), was found to cause a mixed cI/cIII inhibition, and thus to act as typical mitotoxic neurotoxicant.
Enhanced detection of neurotoxicants by the Glc–Gal shift NeuriTox assay
To determine the assay performance of the Glc–Gal shift assay, the training set was expanded to a total of n = 53 (adjust) substances. They represented different types of mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial toxicant classes (Fig. 8a, Suppl. Item 1). While specific cIV inhibitors were hard to find, many compounds have been described earlier to block cI and cIII. Several of these have been optimized for pesticide use (Becker et al. 1981; FRAC 2011; Lümmen 1998; Nauen and Bretschneider 2002; Sherer et al. 2007). Our classification of these compounds is based on their original description or review literature on this. In this context, it is important to note that the uncertainties of classification differ from toxicant to toxicant. Substances like rotenone have a high specificity and have been used and confirmed in dozens of studies, while descriptions of other compounds may date back many decades, and data on the specificity of a mode of action (as opposed to other ones) are hard to determine. In a synoptic overview, the literature-based classification was displayed together with information on confirmed mechanisms in the MRC complex assay for a subset of compounds (Fig. 8b).
To identify the substances to which cells were more sensitive in the Gal conditions, the EC25(NA)[Glc/Gal] ratio was calculated and color coded. Further on, as measure for specific neurotoxicity, the EC25(V/NA) ratio was calculated for both, the Glc and Gal conditions. For many of the tested cI–cIV inhibitors, the specificity ratio increased in Gal medium. For uncouplers and non-mitochondrial toxicants of all modes of action (e.g., cytoskeleton interfering, proteasome inhibitors, endoplasmic reticulum stressors, and DNA damaging agents), the ratios were hardly affected (Fig. 8b, c).
Assessing the Glc vs Gal offset in more detail, it gets obvious that Gal cells had clearly increased sensitivities to all tested cI inhibitors (median offset of 450) and clearly no increased sensitivity to all tested non-mitochondrial toxicants (median offset ratio of 1.0) (Fig. 8d). Inhibitors for cIII and cIV had median offset ratios of 17 and 8.1, while other toxicants showed largely similar effects in Glc and Gal medium.
A clear alert for neurotoxicity was also given for valinomycin and salinomycin. Both compounds are described to be selective potassium ionophores (Daniele and Holian 1976; Furlong et al. 1998; Mitani et al. 1975; Naujokat et al. 2010). This provides a plausible MoA: under physiological conditions, the proton motive force (Δp, Gibb’s free energy) across the inner mitochondrial membrane, is due to: (1) the concentration gradient of H+ (ΔpH) and (2) the mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ). A free potassium transport across the mitochondrial membranes (caused by valinomycin) eliminates ΔΨ, while ΔpH is not affected directly. Thus, potassium ionophores decrease Δp, but do not completely eliminate it (different from classical uncouplers). Since respiration of intact cells was increased after valinomycin treatment (not shown), these two compounds were classified as uncouplers, although their MoA differs from classic H+ ionophore uncouplers. The specificity ratio was increased for valinomycin and salinomycin in Gal medium, confirming the neurotoxicity of these compounds. Sensitivity of the cells to the proton ionophores CCCP and FCCP, which both rescind the proton (ΔpH) and charge (ΔΨ) gradients, was slightly increased in Gal conditions. However, the EC25(V/NA) ratio was decreased for both uncouplers from ≥ 4 in Glc to < 4 in Gal. The comprehensive understanding of potential organ (CNS)-specific toxicities of such compounds will require further studies.
Among the tested cIII inhibitors, hydramethylnon was the only one, for which no sensitivity offset between Glc and Gal conditions was observed. Moreover, its EC25(V/NA) ratio was the lowest of all measured cIII inhibitors. Viability and neurite outgrowth curves were overlapping and extremely steep, which made it technically difficult to quantify small changes robustly, and other (non-mitochondrial) MoA cannot be excluded for this compound.
Conclusions and outlook
Detection and evaluation of neurotoxicity and mitotoxicity
In this study, we evaluated the feasibility and usefulness of tuning the established NeuriTox assay to detect mitochondrial neurotoxicants more sensitively. Culture in galactose-containing medium made LUHMES cells metabolically more reliant on mitochondrial metabolism.
The a priori effect of Gal on toxicant sensitivity is assumed to be due to a higher dependence of cells on MRC function (Marroquin et al. 2007). Although our data are largely consistent with this (Suppl. Items 6, 7), detailed mechanistic follow up seems important for two reasons: (1) the data do not allow conclusions on whether ‘mitochondrial function’ refers only to ATP synthesis, or whether other processes, such as mitochondrial ROS generation (Indo et al. 2007) are also involved; (2) the exact analysis of concentration–response curves suggests that cell function (neurite outgrowth) may be affected at inhibitor concentrations not affecting ATP levels (Suppl. Item 6).
Besides galactose, other carbohydrates and metabolic modifiers have been used for metabolic reprogramming of cells. It is important to note that nearly all of them show cell type-specific effects, as they depend on the expression patterns of specific enzymes as well as specific metabolic need of the respective cells. For instance, fructose can be used to shift the cell death program from apoptosis to necrosis in hepatocytes, or to protect the liver from TNF toxicity in vivo (Latta et al. 2000). It acts by depleting cellular phosphate (and therefore ATP), similarly to the frequently used sugar analogue deoxyglucose (Pietzke et al. 2014). Mannose acts on certain tumor cells by impairment of glycolysis and increases the cytotoxic effects of chemotherapy without affecting cellular ATP levels (Gonzalez et al. 2018).
Other metabolic modifiers that drastically affect cellular apoptosis/necrosis are, e.g., nitric oxide (Leist et al. 1999; Volbracht et al. 1999) or the amino sugar galactosamine (Gantner et al. 1995; Leist et al. 1995). Also here, cell specificities are observed due to the metabolic machinery expressed. Our study shows that LUHMES cells, at the developmental stage used for the NeuriTox test, ideally fulfill the requirements for a Glc–Gal shift assay: (1) they can use Gal as energy substrate (and survive up to 9 days in it), and (2) they are metabolically re-programmed by Gal to increase mitochondrial contribution to ATP generation.
This allowed a more sensitive identification of neurotoxicants and mitochondrial toxicants. While the former are identified by a ratio of EC25(V)/EC25(NA) ≥ 4, the latter can be identified by an increased sensitivity in Gal conditions vs Glc conditions [shift in EC25(NA)]. If the threshold for that shift is set to two, mitochondrial toxicants are identified with a sensitivity of 89% (for cI–V inhibitors and non-mitochondrial toxicants; n = 39). Toxicants with a MoA that is not primarily related to mitochondrial metabolism showed no shift in sensitivity in Glc vs Gal conditions. The test specificity was in this case 100% for non-mitochondrial substances. This was regardless of the fact whether these substances were considered to be neurotoxic (e.g., colchicine, narciclasine, brefeldin, albendazole) or unspecifically cytotoxic (e.g. MG-132, cisplatin).
A major challenge in the field of mitotoxicity remains the exact definition and mechanistic understanding of processes leading to “mitochondrial toxicity”. The Glc–Gal-shift assays as tool to identify neuronal MRC inhibitors has been successfully applied here for a neuronal culture. Although the new test has proven to be valuable already, important questions remain with respect to a broader characterization of diverse mitochondrial dysfunctions, e.g., triggered by inhibitors of fatty acid oxidation, mitochondrial DNA synthesis, the urea cycle or phospholipid and steroid synthesis.
Our finding that toxicity to cI inhibitors was extremely affected by the Glc–Gal shift, while cells were hardly sensitized to cII inhibitors, shows that these MRC complexes must take fundamentally different physiological roles and thus cause different toxicities. This deserves further attention, e.g., in the context of AOP development, where the key event “mitochondrial dysfunction” (Terron et al. 2018) may need to be defined in more detail.
Abbreviations
- ADP:
-
Adenosine triphosphate
- AOP:
-
Adverse outcome pathway
- Asp:
-
l-Aspartate
- ATP:
-
Adenosine diphosphate
- cAMP:
-
N6,2′-O-Dibutyryladenosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate
- cI–V:
-
MRC complex I–V
- CNS:
-
Central nervous system
- Cyt c:
-
Cytochrome c
- FAD(H2):
-
Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD: oxidized, FADH2: reduced)
- FCCP:
-
Carbonyl cyanide-4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone
- G6P:
-
Glucose-6-phosphate
- Gal1P:
-
Galactose-1-phosphate
- GALK:
-
Galactokinase
- GALT:
-
Galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase
- GDNF:
-
Glial derived neurotrophic factor
- Glc1P:
-
Glucose-1-phosphate
- Hex:
-
Hexose, in this study either glucose or galactose
- HK:
-
Hexokinase
- Lac:
-
Lactate
- Mal:
-
Malate
- MoA:
-
Mode of action
- MPP:
-
1-Methyl-4-phenylpyridinium
- MRC:
-
Mitochondrial respiratory chain
- NA:
-
Neurite area
- NAD(H):
-
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD: oxidized, NADH: reduced)
- NPA:
-
3-Nitropropionic acid
- O2 :
-
Oxygen
- OA:
-
Oxaloacetate
- OCR:
-
Oxygen consumption rate
- PC:
-
Pyruvate carboxylase
- PGM:
-
Phosphoglucomutase
- Pyr:
-
Pyruvate
- Q:
-
Ubiquinone or coenzyme Q
- ROS:
-
Reactive oxygen species
- Ser:
-
l-Serine
- SSA:
-
5′-Sulfosalicylic acid
- TCA:
-
Citric acid cycle or Krebs cycle or tricarbonic acid cycle
- UDP:
-
Uridine diphosphate
- UDP-GALE:
-
UDP-glucose 4-epimerase
- V:
-
Viability
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Land-BW (INVITE, NEURODEG), the BMBF (e:ToP program, NeuriTox), UKN/DFG (KoRS-CB) and the Projects from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme EU-ToxRisk (grant agreement No 681002) and ENDpoiNTs (grant agreement No 825759). We thank Dr. Philipp Secker for fruitful discussions about the mitochondrial complex activity assay.
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Delp, J., Funke, M., Rudolf, F. et al. Development of a neurotoxicity assay that is tuned to detect mitochondrial toxicants. Arch Toxicol 93, 1585–1608 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00204-019-02473-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00204-019-02473-y