4.7 Article

Light-induced modulation of the mitochondrial respiratory chain activity: possibilities and limitations

Journal

CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES
Volume 77, Issue 14, Pages 2815-2838

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-019-03321-z

Keywords

Phototoxicity; Apoptosis; Reactive oxygen species (ROS); High fluence low-power laser irradiation; Photobiomodulation; Mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta m phi)

Funding

  1. Operational Programme Research, Development and Education - European Structural and Investment Funds
  2. Operational Programme Research, Development and Education - Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports [SOLID21-CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000760]
  3. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation, goszadanie [8.3134.2017/4.6]
  4. MH CZ-DRO Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine-IKEM [IN 00023001]

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Biological effects of high fluence low-power (HFLP) lasers have been reported for some time, yet the molecular mechanisms procuring cellular responses remain obscure. A better understanding of the effects of HFLP lasers on living cells will be instrumental for the development of new experimental and therapeutic strategies. Therefore, we investigated sub-cellular mechanisms involved in the laser interaction with human hepatic cell lines. We show that mitochondria serve as sub-cellular sensor and effector of laser light non-specific interactions with cells. We demonstrated that despite blue and red laser irradiation results in similar apoptotic death, cellular signaling and kinetic of biochemical responses are distinct. Based on our data, we concluded that blue laser irradiation inhibited cytochrome c oxidase activity in electron transport chain of mitochondria. Contrary, red laser triggered cytochrome c oxidase excessive activation. Moreover, we showed that Bcl-2 protein inhibited laser-induced toxicity by stabilizing mitochondria membrane potential. Thus, cells that either overexpress or have elevated levels of Bcl-2 are protected from laser-induced cytotoxicity. Our findings reveal the mechanism how HFLP laser irradiation interfere with cell homeostasis and underscore that such laser irradiation permits remote control of mitochondrial function in the absence of chemical or biological agents.

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