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Dive into the research topics where David J. Chess is active.

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Featured researches published by David J. Chess.


Biochemistry | 2013

Effect of Calcium on the Oxidative Phosphorylation Cascade in Skeletal Muscle Mitochondria

Brian Glancy; Wayne T. Willis; David J. Chess; Robert S. Balaban

Calcium is believed to regulate mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, thereby contributing to the maintenance of cellular energy homeostasis. Skeletal muscle, with an energy conversion dynamic range of up to 100-fold, is an extreme case for evaluating the cellular balance of ATP production and consumption. This study examined the role of Ca(2+) in the entire oxidative phosphorylation reaction network in isolated skeletal muscle mitochondria and attempted to extrapolate these results back to the muscle, in vivo. Kinetic analysis was conducted to evaluate the dose-response effect of Ca(2+) on the maximal velocity of oxidative phosphorylation (V(maxO)) and the ADP affinity. Force-flow analysis evaluated the interplay between energetic driving forces and flux to determine the conductance, or effective activity, of individual steps within oxidative phosphorylation. Measured driving forces [extramitochondrial phosphorylation potential (ΔG(ATP)), membrane potential, and redox states of NADH and cytochromes b(H), b(L), c(1), c, and a,a(3)] were compared with flux (oxygen consumption) at 37 °C; 840 nM Ca(2+) generated an ~2-fold increase in V(maxO) with no change in ADP affinity (~43 μM). Force-flow analysis revealed that Ca(2+) activation of V(maxO) was distributed throughout the oxidative phosphorylation reaction sequence. Specifically, Ca(2+) increased the conductance of Complex IV (2.3-fold), Complexes I and III (2.2-fold), ATP production/transport (2.4-fold), and fuel transport/dehydrogenases (1.7-fold). These data support the notion that Ca(2+) activates the entire muscle oxidative phosphorylation cascade, while extrapolation of these data to the exercising muscle predicts a significant role of Ca(2+) in maintaining cellular energy homeostasis.


Biochemistry | 2009

Succinyl-CoA Synthetase Is a Phosphate Target for the Activation of Mitochondrial Metabolism

Darci Phillips; Angel Aponte; Stephanie French; David J. Chess; Robert S. Balaban

Succinyl-CoA synthetase (SCS) is the only mitochondrial enzyme capable of ATP production via substrate level phosphorylation in the absence of oxygen, but it also plays a key role in the citric acid cycle, ketone metabolism, and heme synthesis. Inorganic phosphate (P(i)) is a signaling molecule capable of activating oxidative phosphorylation at several sites, including NADH generation and as a substrate for ATP formation. In this study, it was shown that P(i) binds the porcine heart SCS alpha-subunit (SCSalpha) in a noncovalent manner and enhances its enzymatic activity, thereby providing a new target for P(i) activation in mitochondria. Coupling 32P labeling of intact mitochondria with SDS gel electrophoresis revealed that 32P labeling of SCSalpha was enhanced in substrate-depleted mitochondria. Using mitochondrial extracts and purified bacterial SCS (BSCS), we showed that this enhanced 32P labeling resulted from a simple binding of 32P, not covalent protein phosphorylation. The ability of SCSalpha to retain its 32P throughout the SDS denaturing gel process was unique over the entire mitochondrial proteome. In vitro studies also revealed a P(i)-induced activation of SCS activity by more than 2-fold when mitochondrial extracts and purified BSCS were incubated with millimolar concentrations of P(i). Since the level of 32P binding to SCSalpha was increased in substrate-depleted mitochondria, where the matrix P(i) concentration is increased, we conclude that SCS activation by P(i) binding represents another mitochondrial target for the P(i)-induced activation of oxidative phosphorylation and anaerobic ATP production in energy-limited mitochondria.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2012

Regulation of oxidative phosphorylation complex activity: effects of tissue-specific metabolic stress within an allometric series and acute changes in workload

Darci Phillips; Raul Covian; Angel Aponte; Brian Glancy; Joni F. Taylor; David J. Chess; Robert S. Balaban

The concentration of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation complexes (MOPCs) is tuned to the maximum energy conversion requirements of a given tissue; however, whether the activity of MOPCs is altered in response to acute changes in energy conversion demand is unclear. We hypothesized that MOPCs activity is modulated by tissue metabolic stress to maintain the energy-metabolism homeostasis. Metabolic stress was defined as the observed energy conversion rate/maximum energy conversion rate. The maximum energy conversion rate was assumed to be proportional to the concentration of MOPCs, as determined with optical spectroscopy, gel electrophoresis, and mass spectrometry. The resting metabolic stress of the heart and liver across the range of resting metabolic rates within an allometric series (mouse, rabbit, and pig) was determined from MPOCs content and literature respiratory values. The metabolic stress of the liver was high and nearly constant across the allometric series due to the proportional increase in MOPCs content with resting metabolic rate. In contrast, the MOPCs content of the heart was essentially constant in the allometric series, resulting in an increasing metabolic stress with decreasing animal size. The MOPCs activity was determined in native gels, with an emphasis on Complex V. Extracted MOPCs enzyme activity was proportional to resting metabolic stress across tissues and species. Complex V activity was also shown to be acutely modulated by changes in metabolic stress in the heart, in vivo and in vitro. The modulation of extracted MOPCs activity suggests that persistent posttranslational modifications (PTMs) alter MOPCs activity both chronically and acutely, specifically in the heart. Protein phosphorylation of Complex V was correlated with activity inhibition under several conditions, suggesting that protein phosphorylation may contribute to activity modulation with energy metabolic stress. These data are consistent with the notion that metabolic stress modulates MOPCs activity in the heart.


Journal of Microscopy | 2010

Optimizing multiphoton fluorescence microscopy light collection from living tissue by noncontact total emission detection (epiTED)

Christian A. Combs; Aleksandr V. Smirnov; David J. Chess; Dorian B. McGavern; Jamie Schroeder; Jason D. Riley; Silvia S. Kang; Merav Lugar-Hammer; Amir H. Gandjbakhche; Jay R. Knutson; Robert S. Balaban

A benefit of multiphoton fluorescence microscopy is the inherent optical sectioning that occurs during excitation at the diffraction‐limited spot. The scanned collection of fluorescence emission is incoherent; that is, no real image needs to be formed on the detector plane. The nearly isotropic emission of fluorescence excited at the focal spot allows for new detection schemes that efficiently funnel all attainable photons to detector(s). We previously showed [Combs, C.A., et al. (2007) Optimization of multiphoton excitation microscopy by total emission detection using a parabolic light reflector. J. Microsc. 228, 330–337] that parabolic mirrors and condensers could be combined to collect the totality of solid angle around the excitation spot for tissue blocks, leading to ∼8‐fold signal gain. Using a similar approach, we have developed an in vivo total emission detection (epiTED) instrument modified to make noncontact images from outside of living tissue. Simulations suggest that a ∼4‐fold enhancement may be possible (much larger with lower NA objectives than the 0.95 NA used here) with this approach, depending on objective characteristics, imaging depth and the characteristics of the sample being imaged. In our initial prototype, 2‐fold improvements were demonstrated in the mouse brain and skeletal muscle as well as the rat kidney, using a variety of fluorophores and no compromise of spatial resolution. These results show this epiTED prototype effectively doubles emission signal in vivo; thus, it will maintain the image signal‐to‐noise ratio at two times the scan rate or enable full scan rate at approximately 30% reduced laser power (to minimize photo‐damage).


Microcirculation | 2014

In Vivo Microscopy Reveals Extensive Embedding of Capillaries within the Sarcolemma of Skeletal Muscle Fibers

Brian Glancy; Li-Yueh Hsu; Lam Dao; Matthew Bakalar; Stephanie French; David J. Chess; Joni Taylor; Martin Picard; Angel Aponte; Mathew P. Daniels; Shervin G. Esfahani; Samuel W. Cushman; Robert S. Balaban

To provide insight into mitochondrial function in vivo, we evaluated the 3D spatial relationship between capillaries, mitochondria, and muscle fibers in live mice.


Journal of Microscopy | 2012

Three‐dimensional motion tracking for high‐resolution optical microscopy, in vivo

Matthew Bakalar; James L. Schroeder; Randall Pursley; Thomas J. Pohida; Brian Glancy; Joni Taylor; David J. Chess; Peter Kellman; Hui Xue; Robert S. Balaban

When conducting optical imaging experiments, in vivo, the signal to noise ratio and effective spatial and temporal resolution is fundamentally limited by physiological motion of the tissue. A three‐dimensional (3D) motion tracking scheme, using a multiphoton excitation microscope with a resonant galvanometer, (512 × 512 pixels at 33 frames s−1) is described to overcome physiological motion, in vivo. The use of commercially available graphical processing units permitted the rapid 3D cross‐correlation of sequential volumes to detect displacements and adjust tissue position to track motions in near real‐time. Motion phantom tests maintained micron resolution with displacement velocities of up to 200 μm min−1, well within the drift observed in many biological tissues under physiologically relevant conditions. In vivo experiments on mouse skeletal muscle using the capillary vasculature with luminal dye as a displacement reference revealed an effective and robust method of tracking tissue motion to enable (1) signal averaging over time without compromising resolution, and (2) tracking of cellular regions during a physiological perturbation.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2013

Optical spectroscopy in turbid media using an integrating sphere: mitochondrial chromophore analysis during metabolic transitions.

David J. Chess; Eric M. Billings; Raul Covian; Brian Glancy; Stephanie French; Joni Taylor; Heather de Bari; Elizabeth Murphy; Robert S. Balaban

Recent evidence suggests that the activity of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation complexes (MOPCs) is modulated at multiple sites. Here, a method of optically monitoring electron distribution within and between MOPCs is described using a center-mounted sample in an integrating sphere (to minimize scattering effects) with a rapid-scanning spectrometer. The redox-sensitive MOPC absorbances (∼465-630 nm) were modeled using linear least squares analysis with individual chromophore spectra. Classical mitochondrial activity transitions (e.g., ADP-induced increase in oxygen consumption) were used to characterize this approach. Most notable in these studies was the observation that intermediates of the catalytic cycle of cytochrome oxidase are dynamically modulated with metabolic state. The MOPC redox state, along with measurements of oxygen consumption and mitochondrial membrane potential, was used to evaluate the conductances of different sections of the electron transport chain. This analysis then was applied to mitochondria isolated from rabbit hearts subjected to ischemia/reperfusion (I/R). Surprisingly, I/R resulted in an inhibition of all measured MOPC conductances, suggesting a coordinated down-regulation of mitochondrial activity with this well-established cardiac perturbation.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

Continuous monitoring of enzymatic activity within native electrophoresis gels: Application to mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation complexes

Raul Covian; David J. Chess; Robert S. Balaban

Native gel electrophoresis allows the separation of very small amounts of protein complexes while retaining aspects of their activity. In-gel enzymatic assays are usually performed by using reaction-dependent deposition of chromophores or light-scattering precipitates quantified at fixed time points after gel removal and fixation, limiting the ability to analyze the enzyme reaction kinetics. Herein, we describe a custom reaction chamber with reaction medium recirculation and filtering and an imaging system that permits the continuous monitoring of in-gel enzymatic activity even in the presence of turbidity. Images were continuously collected using time-lapse high-resolution digital imaging, and processing routines were developed to obtain kinetic traces of the in-gel activities and analyze reaction time courses. This system also permitted the evaluation of enzymatic activity topology within the protein bands of the gel. This approach was used to analyze the reaction kinetics of two mitochondrial complexes in native gels. Complex IV kinetics showed a short initial linear phase in which catalytic rates could be calculated, whereas Complex V activity revealed a significant lag phase followed by two linear phases. The utility of monitoring the entire kinetic behavior of these reactions in native gels, as well as the general application of this approach, is discussed.


Mitochondrion | 2012

Mitochondrial fission–fusion activities regulate cell fate determination between proliferation and differentiation: A possible link to tumorigenesis

Kasturi Mitra; Richa Rikhy; Mary A. Lilly; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; David J. Chess; Bob Balaban


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Monitoring of the activity and redox state of mitochondrial complexes in physiological and pathological conditions using in-gel kinetics acquisition and integrating sphere spectroscopy

Raul Covian; David J. Chess; Eric M. Billings; Brian Glancy; Stephanie French; Joni Taylor; Elizabeth Murphy; Robert S. Balaban

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Robert S. Balaban

National Institutes of Health

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Brian Glancy

National Institutes of Health

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Joni Taylor

National Institutes of Health

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Raul Covian

National Institutes of Health

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Stephanie French

National Institutes of Health

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Angel Aponte

National Institutes of Health

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Darci Phillips

National Institutes of Health

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Elizabeth Murphy

National Institutes of Health

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Eric M. Billings

National Institutes of Health

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Matthew Bakalar

National Institutes of Health

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