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Demarcating the membrane damage for the extraction of functional mitochondria

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摘要 Defective mitochondria have been linked to several critical human diseases such as neurodegenerative disorders,cancers and cardiovascular disease.However,the detailed characterization of mitochondria has remained relatively unexplored,largely due to the lack of effective extraction methods that may sufficiently retain the functionality of mitochondria,particularly when limited amount of sample is considered.In this study,we explore the possibility of modulating hydrodynamic stress through a cross-junction geometry at microscale to selectively disrupt the cellular membrane while mitochondrial membrane is secured.The operational conditions are empirically optimized to effectively shred the cell membranes while keeping mitochondria intact for the model mammalian cell lines,namely human embryonic kidney cells,mouse muscle cells and neuroblastoma cells.Unsurprisingly,the disruption of cell membranes with higher elastic moduli(neuroblastoma)requires elevated stress.This study also presents a comparative analysis of total protein yield and concentrations of extracted functional mitochondria with two commercially available mitochondria extraction approaches,the Dounce Homogenizer and the Qproteome®Mitochondria Isolation Kit,in a range of cell concentrations.Our findings show that the proposed“microscale cell shredder”yields at least 40%more functional mitochondria than the two other approaches and is able to preserve the morphological integrity of extracted mitochondria,particularly at low cell concentrations(5–20×10^(4) cells/mL).Characterized by its capability of rapidly processing a limited quantity of samples(200μL),demarcating the membrane damage through the proposed microscale cell shredder represents a novel strategy to extract subcellular organelles from clinical samples.
出处 《Microsystems & Nanoengineering》 EI CSCD 2018年第1期1-12,共12页 微系统与纳米工程(英文)
基金 This work was supported in part by the Shun Hing Institute of Advanced Engineering(Project#BME-p2-17) the Direct Research Grant provided by the Chinese University of Hong Kong.A.C.W.would also like to acknowledge the support provided by the Ministry of Science and Technology of the Republic of China(MOST)(MOST-106-2218-E-002-015 and MOST-107-2636-B-002-001).
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