4.6 Article

A cell culture platform for quantifying metabolic substrate oxidation in bicarbonate-buffered medium

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JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
卷 298, 期 2, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101547

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  1. Snow Medical Fellowship, QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia
  3. Medical Research Future Fund
  4. Queensland Health

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Complex diseases are linked to changes in metabolism, and a new method using a bicarbonate-buffered well-plate platform has been developed to study and screen metabolic activity under more physiological conditions.
Complex diseases such as cancer and diabetes are underpinned by changes in metabolism, specifically by which and how nutrients are catabolized. Substrate utilization can be directly examined by measuring a metabolic endpoint rather than an intermediate (such as a metabolite in the tricarboxylic acid cycle). For instance, oxidation of specific substrates can be measured in vitro by incubation of live cultures with substrates containing radiolabeled carbon and measuring radiolabeled carbon dioxide. To increase throughput, we previously developed a miniaturized platform to measure substrate oxidation of both adherent and suspension cells using multiwell plates rather than flasks. This enabled multiple conditions to be examined simultaneously, ideal for drug screens and mechanistic studies. However, like many metabolic assays, this was not compatible with bicarbonate-buffered media, which is susceptible to alkalinization upon exposure to gas containing little carbon dioxide such as air. While other buffers such as HEPES can overcome this problem, bicarbonate has additional biological roles as a metabolic substrate and in modulating hormone signaling. Here, we create a bicarbonate-buffered well-plate platform to measure substrate oxidation. This was achieved by introducing a sealed environment within each well that was equilibrated with carbon dioxide, enabling bicarbonate buffering. As proof of principle, we assessed metabolic flux in cultured adipocytes, demonstrating that bicarbonate buffered medium increased lipogenesis, glucose oxidation, and sensitivity to insulin in comparison to HEPES-buffered medium. This convenient and high-throughput method facilitates the study and screening of metabolic activity under more physiological conditions to aid biomedical research.

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