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      Engineering of a near-infrared fluorescent probe for real-time simultaneous visualization of intracellular hypoxia and induced mitophagy†

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          Abstract

          A near-infrared fluorescent probe has been developed for real-time simultaneous visualization of intracellular hypoxia and the subsequent induced mitophagy.

          Abstract

          Mitophagy induced by hypoxia plays an important role in regulating cellular homeostasis via the removal of dysfunctional mitochondria in the lysosomal degradation pathway, which results in physiological changes in the mitochondria, such as the pH, polarity and viscosity. However, the lack of an effective method for imaging of both the hypoxic microenvironment and the resulting variable mitochondria limits the visualization of hypoxia-induced mitophagy. Based on the specific mitochondrial pH changes during the hypoxia-induced mitophagy process, we have reported a near-infrared fluorescent probe (NIR-HMA) for real-time simultaneous visualization of the hypoxic microenvironment and the subsequent mitophagy process in live cells. NIR-HMA selectively accumulated in the hypoxic mitochondria in the NIR-MAO form, emitting at 710 nm, and then transformed into NIR-MAOH, emitting at 675 nm, in the acidified mitochondria-containing autolysosomes. Importantly, by smartly tethering the hypoxia-responsive group to the hydroxyl group of the NIR-fluorochrome, which shows ratiometric pH changes, NIR-HMA can differentiate between different levels of the hypoxic microenvironment and mitophagy. Furthermore, using NIR-HMA, we could track the complete mitophagy process from the mitochondria to the autolysosomes and visualize mitophagy caused only by hypoxia both in cancer cells and normal cells. Finally, NIR-HMA was applied to investigate the role that mitophagy plays in the hypoxic microenvironment via the cycling hypoxia-reoxygenation model. We observed a decreased fluorescence ratio after reoxygenation and a further increased mitophagy level after hypoxia was induced again, suggesting that mitophagy might be a self-protective process that allows cells to adapt to hypoxia. Our work may provide an attractive way for real-time visualization of relevant physiological processes in hypoxic microenvironments.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Chem Sci
          Chem Sci
          Chemical Science
          Royal Society of Chemistry
          2041-6520
          2041-6539
          15 May 2018
          28 June 2018
          : 9
          : 24
          : 5347-5353
          Affiliations
          [a ] Molecular Science and Biomedicine Laboratory , State Key Laboratory of Chemo/Biosensing and Chemometrics , College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering , Collaborative Innovation Center for Chemistry and Molecular Medicine , Hunan University , Changsha , 410082 , P. R. China . Email: xbzhang@ 123456hnu.edu.cn
          Author information
          http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8757-1620
          http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4010-0028
          Article
          c8sc01684d
          10.1039/c8sc01684d
          6009437
          30009005
          691aec40-da79-4006-bae5-cced4c5ece96
          This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018

          This article is freely available. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY-NC 3.0)

          History
          : 13 April 2018
          : 10 May 2018
          Categories
          Chemistry

          Notes

          †Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c8sc01684d


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