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Ex vivo immunocapture and functional characterization of cell-type-specific mitochondria using MitoTag mice

  • Natalia Prudente de Mello
  • , Caroline Fecher
  • , Adrian Marti Pastor
  • , Fabiana Perocchi
  • , Thomas Misgeld
  • Technical University of Munich
  • Helmholtz Zentrum München German Research Center for Environmental Health
  • University of Munich
  • Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
  • Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy)
  • German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE)

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mitochondria are key bioenergetic organelles involved in many biosynthetic and signaling pathways. However, their differential contribution to specific functions of cells within complex tissues is difficult to dissect with current methods. The present protocol addresses this need by enabling the ex vivo immunocapture of cell-type-specific mitochondria directly from their tissue context through a MitoTag reporter mouse. While other available methods were developed for bulk mitochondria isolation or more abundant cell-type-specific mitochondria, this protocol was optimized for the selective isolation of functional mitochondria from medium-to-low-abundant cell types in a heterogeneous tissue, such as the central nervous system. The protocol has three major parts: First, mitochondria of a cell type of interest are tagged via an outer mitochondrial membrane eGFP by crossing MitoTag mice to a cell-type-specific Cre-driver line or by delivery of viral vectors for Cre expression. Second, homogenates are prepared from relevant tissues by nitrogen cavitation, from which tagged organelles are immunocaptured using magnetic microbeads. Third, immunocaptured mitochondria are used for downstream assays, e.g., to probe respiratory capacity or calcium handling, revealing cell-type-specific mitochondrial diversity in molecular composition and function. The MitoTag approach enables the identification of marker proteins to label cell-type-specific organelle populations in situ, elucidates cell-type-enriched mitochondrial metabolic and signaling pathways, and reveals functional mitochondrial diversity between adjacent cell types in complex tissues, such as the brain. Apart from establishing the mouse colony (6–8 weeks without import), the immunocapture protocol takes 2 h and functional assays require 1–2 h.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2181-2220
Number of pages40
JournalNature Protocols
Volume18
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2023

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