4.6 Article

Multifaceted Analyses of Isolated Mitochondria Establish the Anticancer Drug 2-Hydroxyoleic Acid as an Inhibitor of Substrate Oxidation and an Activator of Complex IV-Dependent State 3 Respiration

Journal

CELLS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11030578

Keywords

2-hydroxyoleic acid; mitochondria; molecular dynamics; respiration; glycolysis; shotgun lipidomics; bioenergetics; membrane lipid therapy

Categories

Funding

  1. EU [755179-2]
  2. Hungarian Basic Research Fund [OTKA ANN 139553]
  3. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [755179] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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The synthetic fatty acid 2-hydroxyoleic acid (2OHOA) has been investigated for its potential as a cancer therapy. It has been found to regulate membrane lipid composition and structure, and can uncouple oxidative phosphorylation. This study explores the effects of 2OHOA on mitochondria and shows that it hydroxylates mitochondrial lipids, leading to decreased co-enzyme Q diffusion and inhibition of respiratory complex activity.
The synthetic fatty acid 2-hydroxyoleic acid (2OHOA) has been extensively investigated as a cancer therapy mainly based on its regulation of membrane lipid composition and structure, activating various cell fate pathways. We discovered, additionally, that 2OHOA can uncouple oxidative phosphorylation, but this has never been demonstrated mechanistically. Here, we explored the effect of 2OHOA on mitochondria isolated by ultracentrifugation from U118MG glioblastoma cells. Mitochondria were analyzed by shotgun lipidomics, molecular dynamic simulations, spectrophotometric assays for determining respiratory complex activity, mass spectrometry for assessing beta oxidation and Seahorse technology for bioenergetic profiling. We showed that the main impact of 2OHOA on mitochondrial lipids is their hydroxylation, demonstrated by simulations to decrease co-enzyme Q diffusion in the liquid disordered membranes embedding respiratory complexes. This decreased co-enzyme Q diffusion can explain the inhibition of disjointly measured complexes I-III activity. However, it doesn't explain how 2OHOA increases complex IV and state 3 respiration in intact mitochondria. This increased respiration probably allows mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation to maintain ATP production against the 2OHOA-mediated inhibition of glycolytic ATP production. This work correlates 2OHOA function with its modulation of mitochondrial lipid composition, reflecting both 2OHOA anticancer activity and adaptation to it by enhancement of state 3 respiration.

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