A Novel Fluorogenic Probe Reveals Lipid Droplet Dynamics in ME/CFS Fibroblasts, 2024, Ding, Annesley et al

Discussion in 'ME/CFS research' started by Dolphin, Mar 12, 2024.

  1. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/adsr.202300178

    A Novel Fluorogenic Probe Reveals Lipid Droplet Dynamics in ME/CFS Fibroblasts

    Siyang Ding, Oana Sanislav, Daniel Missailidis, Claire Yvonne Allan, Tze Cin Owyong, Ming-Yu Wu, Sijie Chen, Paul Robert Fisher, Sarah Jane Annesley, Yuning Hong
    First published: 10 March 2024

    https://doi.org/10.1002/adsr.202300178

    Ding, S., Sanislav, O., Missailidis, D., Allan, C.Y., Owyong, T.C., Wu, M.-Y., Chen, S., Fisher, P.R., Annesley, S.J. and Hong, Y. (2024), A Novel Fluorogenic Probe Reveals Lipid Droplet Dynamics in ME/CFS Fibroblasts. Adv. Sensor Res. 2300178. https://doi.org/10.1002/adsr.202300178

    Abstract

    Lipid droplets (LDs) are dynamic cellular organelles that play an essential role in lipid metabolism and storage. LD dysregulation has been implicated in various diseases.

    However, investigations into the cellular LD dynamics under disease conditions have been rarely reported, possibly due to the absence of high performing LD imaging agents.

    Here a novel fluorogenic probe, AM-QTPA, is reported for specific LD imaging.

    AM-QTPA demonstrates viscosity sensitivity and aggregation-induced emission enhancement characteristics.

    It is live cell permeable and can specifically light up LDs in cells, with low background noise and superior signals that can be quantified.

    After validation in cell model with LD accumulation induced by oleic acid treatment, AM-QTPA is applied in a small proof-of-concept number of human fibroblast samples derived from people diagnosed with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), a complex and debilitating disease with unknown cause.

    The results indicate the presence of larger but fewer LDs in ME/CFS fibroblasts compared to the healthy counterparts, accompanying with frequent LD-mitochondria contacts, suggesting potential upregulation of lipolysis in ME/CFS connective tissue like fibroblasts.

    Overall, AM-QTPA provides new understanding of the anomalous LD dynamics in disease status, which, potentially, will facilitate in-depth investigation of the pathogenesis of ME/CFS.

     
  2. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    team from La Trobe University, Australia, including @DMissa

    sounds promising
     
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  3. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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  4. wigglethemouse

    wigglethemouse Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    This study, the one quoted above by @SNT Gatchaman from 2022 and the following one from 1991 all noted Lipid droplets in ME/CFS. Seems like Lipid droplets deserves more research focus.
    Mitochondrial abnormalities in the postviral fatigue syndrome
    https://www.s4me.info/threads/mitoc...iral-fatigue-syndrome-1991-behan-et-al.36657/
     
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  5. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Turns out they accomplished something else entirely.
     
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  6. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    and for background reading:
    ______

    Lipid Droplets and the Management of Cellular Stress, 2019
    Abstract

    Lipid droplets are cytosolic fat storage organelles present in most eukaryotic cells. Long regarded merely as inert fat reservoirs, they are now emerging as major regulators of cellular metabolism. They act as hubs that coordinate the pathways of lipid uptake, distribution, storage, and use in the cell. Recent studies have revealed that they are also essential components of the cellular stress response. One of the hallmark characteristics of lipid droplets is their capacity to buffer excess lipids and to finely tune their subsequent release based on specific cellular requirements. This simple feature of lipid droplet biology, buffering and delayed release of lipids, forms the basis for their pleiotropic roles in the cellular stress response.

    In stressed cells, lipid droplets maintain energy and redox homeostasis and protect against lipotoxicity by sequestering toxic lipids into their neutral lipid core. Their mobility and dynamic interactions with mitochondria enable an efficient delivery of fatty acids for optimal energy production. Lipid droplets are also involved in the maintenance of membrane and organelle homeostasis by regulating membrane composition, preventing lipid peroxidation and removing damaged proteins and lipids. Finally, they also engage in a symbiotic relationship with autophagy and act as reservoirs of bioactive lipids that regulate inflammation and immunity. Thus, lipid droplets are central managers of lipid metabolism that function as safeguards against various types of cellular stress.
    ______

    Just a thought, what if some cellular process was producing toxic lipids and/or proteins and they were being sequestered in big lipid droplets. And, when a cell was under some stress, a big energy demand, the lipids were released for energy production. But that also released the toxic molecules, enabling them to subsequently cause harm? Maybe that would fit with PEM, and that 'poisoned' feeling. And maybe it would fit with the 'something in the (ME/CFS) blood', that can impair healthy cells?

    Definitely interesting to see what this group finds e.g. what happens to the lipid droplets under conditions of cell stress, in ME/CFS and healthy cells.
     
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  7. DMissa

    DMissa Established Member (Voting Rights)

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    Hi people. Some due context. We have crazy smart friends over in chemistry who make things like these cool and novel dyes. This paper is focused on one such dye. They wanted a demonstration of potential disease context applications and we had suspicions about LDs so we ran a small pilot sample of skin-derived fibroblasts in the study. So it's really more a chemistry paper than an ME/CFS paper, but I'm glad that we found some differences that can be followed up on.

    I have been thinking about LDs and have some small pilot experiments going on the side to look at them in different tissues and this is part of that. We'll see if the rest of the work turns up anything useful.
     
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  8. DMissa

    DMissa Established Member (Voting Rights)

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  9. wigglethemouse

    wigglethemouse Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Bhupesh Prusty posted this in reply to someone posting your paper. Thought it might interest you given your work immortalizing lymphocytes with EBV.
     
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  10. DMissa

    DMissa Established Member (Voting Rights)

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    LDs are important in the innate immune response so differences in their dynamics in a pathogen context make sense.

    If there are LD dynamics differences in pwME immune tissues/cells (for example) it could be one of two things happening:

    1) an underlying difference in immune response leads to abnormal LD dynamics

    OR

    2) an underlying difference in LD dynamics leads to an abnormal immune response

    A cause and effect problem to try and figure out as always.
     
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  11. Ravn

    Ravn Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Opportunism usually has a bad name but this is a type I like. Way to go! :):thumbsup:
     
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  12. Murph

    Murph Established Member (Voting Rights)

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    I'm extremely excited by the WASF3 work by Hwang et al; so I can't help wondering about a possible link from their finding of endoplasmic reticulum stress to this finding of bigger lipid droplets.

    Pharmacological ER stress promotes hepatic lipogenesis and lipid droplet formation
    Jin-Sook Lee, Roberto Mendez, Henry H Heng, Zeng-Quan Yang, Kezhong Zhang

    Free PMC article
    Abstract
    Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) stress refers to a condition of accumulation of unfolded or misfolded proteins in the ER lumen. A variety of biochemical stimuli or pathophysiologic conditions can directly or indirectly induce ER stress, leading to activation of an ER-originated adaptive signaling response called Unfolded Protein Response (UPR). Recent studies demonstrated that ER stress and UPR signaling are critically involved in the initiation and progression of many diseases, such as metabolic disease, cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative disease, and cancer. In this study, we show that ER stress induced by pharmacologic reagents, including tunicamycin (TM) and thapsigargin (Tg), promotes hepatic lipogenesis and lipid droplet formation. Using quantitative gene expression analysis, we identified 3 groups of key lipogenic regulators or enzymes that are inducible by pharmacological ER stress in a human hepatoma cell line Huh-7. These ER stress-inducible lipogenic factors include: 1) lipogenic trans-activators including CCAAT/ enhancer binding protein alpha (C/EBPα), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ), PPARγ coacti-vator 1-alpha (PGC1α), and Liver X receptor alpha (LXRα); 2) components of lipid droplets including fat-specific protein 27 (FSP27), adipose differentiation related protein (ADRP), fat-inducing transcript 2 (FIT2), and adipocyte lipid-binding protein (AP2); 3) key enzymes involved in de novo lipogenesis including acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1 (ACC1) and stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 (SCD1). Supporting the role of pharmacologic ER stress in up-regulating de novo lipogenesis, TM or Tg treatment significantly increased accumulation of cytosolic lipid droplet formation in the hepatocytes. Moreover, we showed that forced expression of an activated form of X-box binding protein 1 (XBP1), a potent UPR trans-activator, can dramatically increase expression of PPARγ and C/EBPα in Huh-7 cells. The identification of ER stress-inducible lipogenic regulators provides important insights into the molecular basis by which acute ER stress promotes de novo lipogenesis. In summary, the findings from this study have important implication in understanding the link between ER stress and metabolic disease.
     
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  13. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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  14. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    ME Research UK:

    As well as her ME Research UK-supported work on mitochondrial function in ME/CFS, Dr Sarah Annesley at La Trobe University has also been involved in a study measuring the characteristics of lipid droplets in fibroblasts from people with ME/CFS, and the results of that study were recently published in the journal Advanced Sensor Research. Read more:
    https://www.meresearch.org.uk/do-lipid-droplets-play-a-role-in-me-cfs/

     
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