4.5 Article

Menadione-induced endothelial inflammation detected by Raman spectroscopy

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2020.118911

Keywords

Endothelium; Oxidative stress; Mitochondria; Raman imaging; Fluorescence imaging

Funding

  1. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education (Iuventus Plus) [0464/IP1/2016/74]
  2. EU [POWR.03.02.00-00-I013/16]
  3. Priority Research Area BioS under the program Excellence Initiative Research University at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow

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This study investigated the early oxidative stress effect on human endothelial cells induced by menadione using label-free Raman imaging and fluorescence staining. The results showed that short exposure to menadione did not cause apoptosis or necrosis within the 3-hour time frame, but did lead to endothelial inflammation after 3 hours, associated with increased ROS formation. Chemometric analysis revealed spectroscopic markers of oxidative stress-mediated endothelial inflammation.
In this work, the effect of an early oxidative stress on human endothelial cells induced by menadione was studied using a combined methodology of label-free Raman imaging and fluorescence staining. Menadione-induced ROS-dependent endothelial inflammation in human aorta endothelial cells (HAEC) was studied with focus on changes in cytochrome, proteins, nucleic acids and lipids content and their distribution in cells. Fluorescence staining (ICAM-1, VCAM-1, vWF, LipidTox, MitoRos and DCF) was used to confirm endothelial inflammation and ROS generation. The results showed that short time, exposure to menadione did not cause their apoptosis or necrosis (Annexin V Apoptosis Detection Kit) within the 3 h timescale of measurement. On the other hand, 3 h of incubation, did result in endothelial inflammation (ICAM-1, VCAM-1, vWF) that was associated with an increased ROS formation (MitoRos and DCF) suggesting the oxidative stress-mediated inflammation. Chemometric analysis of spectral data enabled the determination of spectroscopic markers of menadione-induced oxidative stress-mediated endothelial inflammation including a decrease of the bands intensity of cytochrome (604, 750, 1128, 1315 and 1585 cm(-1)), nucleic acids bands (785 cm(-1)), proteins (1005 cm(-1)) and increased intensity of lipid bands (722, 1085, 1265, 1303, 1445 and 1660 cm(-1)), without changes in the spectroscopic signature of the cell nucleus. In conclusion, oxidative stress resulting in endothelial inflammation was featured by significant alterations in the number of biochemical changes in mitochondria and other cellular compartments detected by Raman spectroscopy. Most of these, coexisted with results from fluorescence imaging, and most importantly occurred earlier than the detection of increased ROS or markers of endothelial inflammation.

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