Abstract
Metabolic profiles vary across all levels of biological diversity, from cells to taxa. Two-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) facilitates metabolic characterisation of biological specimens by assaying the intrinsic autofluorescence of the ubiquitous coenzymes NAD(P)H and FAD. The potential of this method for characterising the diversity of organismal metabolism remains largely untapped. Using FLIM in Drosophila melanogaster, we show tissue-specificity in fluorescence lifetime that reflects variation in redox patterns. In particular, sperm cells exhibited elevated glycolysis relative to other tissues. We also show that sperm metabolism is phenotypically plastic: compared to male-stored sperm, sperm stored in the female’s storage organ showed a substantial reduction in the protein-bound FAD lifetime fraction but no change in the NAD(P)H profile. This study represents the first ex vivo investigation of sperm metabolism using FLIM.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Sperm cells are highly motile in many taxa, propelling the male genome to the oocyte. On their way through the female reproductive tract, the energy to fuel their motility must be provided, at least in part, internally, through metabolism. However, few studies have clarified the role of sperm metabolism in sperm quality and male fertility. Because female insects are able to store sperm for extended periods of time, in some species up to decades1, insects prove particularly eligible for the study of sperm physiology in the diverse natural environments being male and female reproductive tissues.
The molecular unit of energy, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), is produced mainly from upstream metabolites by glycolysis in the cytoplasm and oxidative phosphorylation (OxPHOS) at the inner mitochondrial membrane. Cells tightly control the balance of OxPHOS vs. glycolysis, since OxPHOS is highly efficient but can also produce damaging reactive oxygen species (ROS), whereas glycolysis produces no ROS but also little ATP. The reduction/oxidation (redox) cofactors nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+/NADH) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD/FADH2) are key players in cellular metabolism. Glycolysis consumes glucose and reduces NAD+ to NADH, independently of oxygen. The resulting pyruvate is fed into the citric acid cycle, in which NAD+ and FAD are further reduced to increase mitochondrial levels of the electron carriers NADH and FADH2. These coenzymes are the driving force for OxPHOS, and hence their redox status reflects energy metabolism.
Cellular NADH and FAD can be assayed optically, by taking advantage of their autofluorescent properties. This label-free approach allows rapid in vivo or ex vivo imaging without the need for transgenic animals. Briefly, oxidised FAD and reduced NAD(P)H (representing NADH and its spectrally indistinguishable phosphorylated variant NADPH2,3,4) are autofluorescent, but their redox counterparts NAD(P)+ and FADH2 are not in a similar way5.
A particularly sensitive optical character of NADH and FAD autofluorescence are their lifetimes, i.e., the duration of the molecules’ transition from the excited state to the ground state. Importantly, the autofluorescence lifetime is responsive to the fluorophore’s chemical environment6,7, including interacting proteins. For example, unbound NADH, being free of interacting proteins and thus internally folded, has two described fluorescence lifetimes of 300 to 800 picoseconds (ps) and approximately 1000 ps7,8,9,10. Protein-bound NAD(P)H, chemically in an extended conformation, has longer lifetimes, between 1000 and 3000 ps depending on the protein7,8,9,11,12,13,14. For FAD, the unbound form has a fluorescence lifetime ranging from 1700 to 3200 ps, falling to 40 to 650 ps upon binding to proteins15,16,17. NAD(P)H fluorescence lifetimes can be used to infer the metabolic pathways operating in a cell: unbound NAD(P)H has been assigned mainly to glycolytic metabolism, whilst protein binding may indicate interaction with enzymes including those of the mitochondrial electron transport chain and, therefore, OxPHOS18. This allows the characterisation of the metabolic state of biological samples based on the relative fractions of unbound and protein-bound NAD(P)H.
Fluorescence lifetime data can be further graphically visualised and analysed in phasor plots18,19,20,21. To generate these plots, raw lifetime decay data of each pixel in an image are transformed fit-free and mapped to a position in a two-dimensional plot. Clustering of pixels with similar metabolic behaviour and their relative positions allows for a more complex interpretation of FLIM data.
The cellular metabolic state can be further evaluated independently of fluorescence lifetime parameters by incorporation of NAD(P)H and FAD concentrations. The optical redox ratio (ORR) is defined as the ratio of fluorescence intensities of the two coenzymes ([FAD]/[NAD(P)H])22,23, or, in a normalised form [FAD]/([NAD(P)H] + [FAD])24. The ORR increases with increasing rates of OxPHOS: NADH levels decrease due to the oxidation of NADH to NAD+, while FAD levels increase due to the oxidation of FADH2 to FAD. Recently, a lifetime-based redox measure based on NAD(P)H and FAD, termed the FLIM redox ratio (FLIRR), has been introduced25. This measure is defined as the ratio of the fraction of NAD(P)H that is protein-bound (i.e., with a long lifetime) to the fraction of FAD that is protein-bound (i.e., with a short lifetime). Similar to the ORR, FLIRR increases with higher metabolic activity25: the fraction of protein-bound NAD(P)H, associated with electron transport chain enzymes, increases, while non-fluorescent FADH2 is converted to unbound fluorescent FAD, thereby reducing the fraction of protein-bound FAD.
For more than a decade, FLIM has been applied for metabolic monitoring in stem cell (e.g.13,17,18,23,26,27) and cancer research (e.g.16,28,29,30,31). Both types of cells are characterised by a more glycolytic status compared to differentiated and non-tumorigenic cells, respectively, as revealed by higher ratios of unbound-to-bound NAD(P)H and hence shorter mean NAD(P)H lifetimes.
Here, we advocate for the use of FLIM to study the metabolism of sperm cells, for which the balance between glycolysis and OxPHOS is critically important. Sperm must metabolise sufficient energy for motility whilst limiting ROS damage to the cell membrane and the paternal genome that may otherwise lead to infertility in humans and other animals32,33,34. Moreover, females of many species and across the animal kingdom can store fertile sperm for extended periods, in some species for several years35. Yet it is not clear how damage to sperm is being prevented over such long periods of time. Studies in insects suggest that a switch in sperm metabolism after being transferred from the male to the female may be involved36,37,38,39. If so, very different metabolic fingerprints should be expected in sperm taken from the male vs. the female environments. Here, we first establish the feasibility of FLIM to characterise metabolism in a variety of tissues of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster (D. melanogaster). We then use this method to evaluate how sperm metabolism is modified after transfer to the female’s storage organ. We identify striking shifts in the FLIRR based mainly on FAD but not NAD(P)H changes.
Results
NAD(P)H autofluorescence lifetimes and phasor plots identify tissue-specific metabolic signatures in D. melanogaster organs
We characterised the metabolism of tissues of D. melanogaster, including i) salivary gland (SGCs) and fat body cells (FBCs) of third instar larvae, ii) enterocytes of the posterior midgut of adult females, and iii) sperm in male and female storage organs. Application of NAD(P)H and FAD FLIM using two-photon laser excitation has proved particularly advantageous for investigations of living tissues. Compared to one-photon excitation, two-photon excitation applies light of longer wavelength and allows for increased imaging quality through reduced tissue damage and interference, as well as increased imaging depth.
We initially investigated the metabolism of larval tissues and generated two-dimensional false-color mean NAD(P)H lifetime images (Fig. 1F–I). SGCs of third instar larvae showed distinct NAD(P)H lifetime signatures in a variety of distinguishable subcellular structures, including mitochondria, the nucleoplasm, and chromatin. NAD(P)H FLIM thus proved feasible for the metabolic investigation of living Drosophila larval tissues. We further studied enterocytes of the posterior midgut subregion P240 of adult females (Fig. 1J). FLIM proved applicable to adult insect tissues, and metabolic differences based on NAD(P)H lifetimes revealed subcellular structures in enterocytes.
We then investigated sperm cells stored in the bag-shaped, paired seminal vesicles as part of the male’s reproductive tract prior to mating. After mating, female fruit flies store sperm for several days to several weeks in two highly specialised organs: the long, coiled seminal receptacle and the paired spermathecae. Sperm displayed a similar NAD(P)H lifetime pattern when stored in the male’s seminal vesicle as when stored in the female’s seminal receptacle (Fig. 1Q–T). In both sexes, NAD(P)H FLIM assigned the sperm mass a homogenous metabolic pattern clearly distinct from that of the surrounding epithelia. In the male’s seminal vesicle, the epithelium showed a dramatically shorter mean lifetime due to the presence of melanin (Fig. 1Q). In the twisted tubes of the female’s seminal receptacle, sperm are surrounded by an epithelial cell layer of intermediate lifetime lined with a structurally distinct layer41 of longer lifetime (Fig. 1S,T). The strong melanin signal in the spermathecae of D. melanogaster females prevented sperm metabolic imaging altogether. In both males and females, the needle-shaped sperm heads containing the nuclei could not be morphologically distinguished from the sperm tails, likely because of the extreme DNA compaction. The sperm-free seminal receptacle of unmated females illustrated the lack of background signal from out-of-focus planes and further confirmed the identification of sperm in mated females (Fig. 1U,V).
We further quantified the metabolic signatures of all tissues by comparing their NAD(P)H lifetime parameters and distributions (Fig. 2). In salivary glands and enterocytes, nuclei were identified and excluded from lifetime data extraction to avoid the interference with non-metabolic NAD(P)H signals originating from gene expression in the nucleus (Suppl. Fig. 1). For the analysis of sperm metabolism, regions representing sperm were subselected in the images and then in the phasor plots prior to FLIM data extraction (Suppl. Fig. 2). SGCs showed a mean lifetime (±SD) of 1395.97 ± 195.73 ps and FBCs of 1684.92 ± 185.76 ps, enterocytes of 1060.45 ± 70.66 ps, sperm of 785.41 ± 33.25 ps in the male’s and 798.82 ± 23.25 ps in the female’s storage organs (Fig. 2A) (Sample sizes N = 4 males for SGCs, N = 5 for all other tissues). The free NAD(P)H contributed 71.26 ± 1.38% to the mean fluorescence lifetime in SGCs and 61.96 ± 3.42% in FBCs, 72.69 ± 1.06% in enterocytes, 79.23 ± 1.44% in sperm in the male, and 78.19 ± 0.48% in sperm in the female (Fig. 2B). The variation within tissues was smaller than across tissues (Fig. 2B).
Long lifetime means differed strongly across tissues, being 3300 ± 350 ps in SGCs, 3480 ± 170 ps in FBCs, 2670 ± 130 ps in enterocytes, 1930 ± 80 ps in male-stored sperm, and 1940 ± 50 ps in female-stored sperm (Fig. 2C). The frequency distributions of lifetime means in the somatic cells showed broad peaks, particularly in the larval cells. The presence of two peaks in the SGCs indicated metabolic differences in their cytoplasmic regions (Fig. 2F). Tissue differences in all three NAD(P)H lifetime parameters were clearly observed in the frequency distributions (Fig. 2D–F). Overall, the low mean NAD(P)H lifetime and the high contribution of unbound NAD(P)H indicate that sperm cells are highly glycolytic compared to the investigated somatic tissues. SGCs and FBCs were in a metabolic state most associated with OxPHOS, while enterocytes showed an intermediate metabolic condition.
The frequency distributions of short NAD(P)H lifetimes showed two distinct peaks in the somatic cells, but only a single prominent peak in sperm (Fig. 2G). We consequently subdivided the short lifetimes of SGCs, FBCs, and enterocytes into two distinct populations per cell type (Fig. 2H–J). The means of the short lifetime peaks in sperm were 497.99 ± 45.32 ps in males and 486.88 ± 25.22 ps in females (Fig. 2K). Short lifetime populations of the non-sperm cell types had means (±SD) of 405.93 ± 21.07 ps and 895.72 ± 8.61 ps for enterocytes, 448.85 ± 25.58 ps and 1104.56 ± 48.34 ps for SGCs, and 447.69 ± 37.22 ps and 1199.97 ± 32.54 ps for FBCs. There was a clear negative relationship across cell types (though not necessarily within cell types) between the long NAD(P)H lifetime and the fraction of the short lifetime. Data points clustered cell type-specifically (Fig. 2L).
Each tissue exhibited a global cell type-specific NAD(P)H lifetime phasor plot signature that complements the two-exponential decay analysis because it makes no assumption about the number of lifetime components. The clusters of the somatic tissues all localised left of the center of the plot, indicating a higher fraction of protein-bound NAD(P)H (Fig. 3A–C). Signatures of sperm stored in males and females both clustered in the same location, right of the center of the plot closest to the unbound NADH, i.e. sole in solution, cluster reflecting the highest short lifetime fractions (Fig. 3D,E). The seminal receptacle of sperm-devoid, unmated females clearly lacked this cluster (Fig. 3F). These data show that sperm pixel clusters were most closely associated with unbound NAD(P)H, characteristic of a highly glycolytic state18 (Fig. 3G). SGC and FBC clusters associated most strongly with the bound NAD(P)H phasor positions reported in other studies, indicative of a strong oxidative state. Enterocytes were in an intermediate state.
NAD(P)H mean lifetime distributions are tissue-specific metabolic fingerprints
Each investigated tissue was characterised by a specific mean NAD(P)H lifetime distribution largely conserved across biological replicates (Fig. 4). Sperm and enterocytes showed a single sharp mean NAD(P)H lifetime peak, which was highly similar but not identical between sperm in male and in female storage organs (Fig. 4A–C). SGCs and FBCs exhibited larger variability between biological replicates and a broader mean lifetime peak due to this higher cross-sample heterogeneity, possibly because more subcellular structures are visible in these than sperm cells (Fig. 4D,E). Again, as for the long lifetime component, the biological replicates showed a reproducible core range representing clearly distinct, cell type-specific NAD(P)H lifetime signatures (Fig. 4F). Each overlap area allocates a specific NAD(P)H lifetime signature to the various cell types and tissues.
Sperm cells stored in males and females differ in protein-bound FAD fractions and the FLIM redox ratio
Mean FLIRR values (±SD), the lifetime-based measure of the redox ratio, clearly differed between sperm in males (0.21 ± 0.01) and females (0.30 ± 0.03), with no overlap between these groups (Fig. 5A). The FLIRR of enterocytes was 0.33 ± 0.03, of SGCs 0.41 ± 0.03, and of FBCs 0.52 ± 0.05. While NAD(P)H lifetime metrics were highly similar in sperm located in both sexes, differences in the FLIRR imply different contributions of protein-bound FAD. In fact, sperm stored in males vs. in females showed the largest mean difference of protein-bound FAD fractions across the investigated insect tissues, with values of 93.59 ± 1.15% in seminal vesicles and 66.69 ± 4.14% in seminal receptacles (Fig. 5B). Somatic tissues showed intermediate contributions of protein-bound FAD, with values of 79.06 ± 1.80% in enterocytes, 75.39 ± 1.41% in SGCs, and 77.47 ± 2.42% in FBCs.
Discussion
In the present work, we demonstrate the feasibility of two-photon FLIM of the autofluorescent cellular biomarkers NAD(P)H and FAD to assess the metabolic states of different D. melanogaster tissues. Our study represents the first investigation of insect sperm metabolism in intact, living organs; previous studies investigated sperm after its release from the storage organs36,37,39. We found that i) sperm were highly glycolytic, in contrast to somatic tissues (Figs. 1–4); ii) the metabolic fingerprints resulted in distinct, likely machine-readable profiles that offer themselves for clinical testing; and iii) the distinct differences in sperm metabolism found in the male and female storage organ of D. melanogaster were, unlike in other animals, caused by differences in FAD, not NAD(P)H.
Sperm of D. melanogaster were highly glycolytic, compared to somatic tissues (Figs. 1–4). Somatic tissues in our study clearly showed distinct patterns including NAD(P)H lifetimes, phasor distributions, and mean lifetime fingerprints indicative of more oxidative metabolism (Figs. 1–4). For example, we found high OxPHOS activity in larval SGCs, an observation that is in agreement with their high oxygen consumption observed prior to pupariation42. We also note that the three parameters - not independent but based on different analyses - largely agreed with one another. The diversity of patterns of long NAD(P)H lifetimes (Fig. 2F) suggests different protein interactions as described in other studies14, and consequently different biochemical networks across various tissues.
While the mode of ATP production in sperm differs across species with regard to the balance between glycolysis and OxPHOS, the unusually high glycolytic activity recorded here contrasts with the general view of mitochondria representing the powerhouses of sperm. In human43 and rodent sperm, glycolysis predominates, as in Drosophila in this study, while OxPHOS and glycolysis coexist balanced in cattle sperm44. In principle, NAD(P)H autofluorescence FLIM is applicable to the sperm of these species, although there are some differences between our approach and other current methods that require consideration. First, in contrast to mammalian sperm, D. melanogaster sperm reside in the female reproductive tract for several weeks rather than a few days. In the future, it would be of interest to measure the metabolic profile of sperm during long-term storage in female insects. In addition, sperm metabolism has usually been examined in sperm collected from the male, which has limited power to predict the performance in the female36,45. Furthermore, on a potentially related note, according to established protocols46 sperm is exposed to ambient levels of oxygen after collection - levels that are likely never encountered in the female reproductive tract. Importantly, both caveats are circumvented with our method. Future research on potential clinical applications of our method should test how metabolism differs in sperm exposed to ambient oxygen levels compared to physiological oxygen levels in the female. After such a calibration, it will be useful to quantify aberrations of sperm metabolism, e.g. NAD(P)H and FAD lifetime parameters, in clinical cases of infertility.
Finally, there is a marked difference in morphology between mammalian and D. melanogaster sperm. Unlike mammalian sperm, insect sperm commonly lack a mitochondria-containing midpiece. Instead, they have a mitochondrial derivative that extends through the entire length of the sperm tail47. Its detailed structure, function, and capacity for oxidative metabolism are still unresolved. Protein or peptide degradation, indicated, e.g., by a high abundance of leucine aminopeptidases in D. melanogaster mitochondrial derivatives48,49, are possible but likely not the sole mechanisms for energetic supply of sperm in males and females. Because these enzymes only partially clarify a predominance towards glycolytic or oxidative metabolism, two-photon FLIM presents itself as a promising method to analyse the structural composition and mechanistic functions of mitochondrial derivatives in insect sperm.
We identified core areas of mean NAD(P)H lifetime signatures that did not overlap between tissues and so may serve as tissues-specific markers (Fig. 4). The identification of such cores, as well as the estimation of their variation across individuals has important technological implications. We thus propose that, given the rapidly advancing development of neural networks for pattern recognition, tissue-specific lifetime and phasor distributions have the potential to serve as machine-readable metabolic FLIM signatures. Such automated pattern recognition and analysis may advance a broad range of applications from basic research to clinical diagnosis and therapy50. The non-invasive diagnosis of cancerous tissue based on FLIM, such as melanoma tissue in humans51, has been described earlier.
Previous studies examining the metabolism of sperm stored in males and females agreed that there was a relative increase in glycolysis in female-stored sperm compared to ejaculated, or male-collected, sperm. This was shown in crickets (Gryllus bimaculatus)36, and bedbugs (Cimex lectularius) using the unbound-to-bound NAD(P)H ratio37, as well as in honeybees (Apis mellifera), in which glycolysis was predominant in sperm in the queen’s oxygen-depleted spermatheca while ejaculated sperm also underwent mitochondrial respiration39. Another study, examining bedbug sperm metabolism based on mean NAD(P)H lifetimes, did not find differences between male- and female-stored sperm, but did reveal larger variation in females38. Interestingly, we also discovered no differences between male- and female-stored sperm if the analysis was restricted to NAD(P)H lifetimes. We did, however, find a difference in the protein-binding behaviour of FAD: the fraction of protein-bound FAD was dramatically lower in female-stored compared to male-stored sperm (Fig. 5). Because the fraction of protein-bound FAD (FAD-a1%) is the denominator of the redox indicator FLIRR, a lower FAD-a1% causes a higher FLIRR and indicates higher metabolic activity25 in sperm in female compared to male storage. It is clear from these results that the FAD-related biology of D. melanogaster sperm is altered considerably upon transfer to the female’s seminal receptacle. The relative importance of metabolic effects including fatty acid beta-oxidation and other cellular FAD-involving processes, such as electron transport, and synthesis of cofactors and coenzymes, as well as DNA repair and nucleotide biosynthesis52, remains to be tested. For example, protein-bound FAD decreases during tumorigenesis in epithelial cells16 and is also affected lineage-specifically upon mesenchymal stem cell differentiation17. Increased beta-oxidation of fatty acids has been proposed to decrease protein-bound FAD levels23, and may be the cause of low protein-bound FAD levels in larval FBCs in our study.
In this work, we demonstrate that two-photon NAD(P)H and FAD FLIM can be used to characterise metabolic states of intact insect tissues, including, for the first time, sperm in their natural physiological environment. While the diversity of tissues that can be investigated will likely necessitate sample-specific adaptations of data analysis pipelines to incorporate morphological and mechanistic characteristics, the core parameters identified here will facilitate automated data processing. Finally, our work extends the applicability of metabolic two-photon autofluorescence FLIM beyond differentiation-, tumorigenesis-, and disease-associated states to investigate the role of environmental conditions on the metabolism of cells, tissues, and whole organisms.
Methods
Fly maintenance and tissue dissections
Isogenic D. melanogaster CantonS flies were provided by Marko Brankatschk (MPI-CBG Dresden, Germany) and outbred D. melanogaster of the wild-type white Dahomey (wDah) strain by Adam Dobson (University College, London, UK). Midguts were derived from wDah females and all other tissues from the CantonS strain. Flies were maintained at 25 °C in an incubator with a 12 h light:dark cycle. For CantonS flies, the diet was a standard medium containing 90 g/l corn meal, 40 g/l yeast, 100 g/l sucrose, 12 g/l agar, 40 ml/l nipagin (10% in ethanol) and 3 ml/l propionic acid in water. The diet for wDah contained 100 g/l yeast, 50 g/l sucrose, 15 g/l agar, 30 ml/l nipagin (10% in ethanol) and 3 ml/l propionic acid in water. Adult male and female flies were kept together in vials to allow repeated matings. Control virgin females were isolated within four hours after eclosion. Prior to dissections, flies were placed in 70% ethanol for approximately 30 seconds and then washed briefly with PBS. The reproductive tracts, including seminal vesicles in males and seminal receptacles in females, were dissected in PBS with fine forceps from adult flies aged five to seven days using a binocular microscope. Seminal vesicles were carefully disentangled from testicular structures by removing the connective fibers between structures in order to allow imaging in a focal plane. Midguts of 7-day-old females were dissected and imaged in CyGel (BioStatus, Shepshed, UK) to reduce peristaltic movements. Salivary glands, comprising the glands themselves and the associated fat body tissue, were dissected from third instar larvae. All samples were placed in 40 μl of solution on an object slide, covered with a coverslip resting on tiny clay feet, and sealed with nail polish. Imaging of all organs was performed within a maximum of ten minutes after dissections. Tissues and individual cells were located and identified using transmitted light microscopy before metabolic imaging.
FLIM measurements
Reduced NAD(P)H absorbs ultraviolet light of approximately 340 nm with one-photon excitation and 740 nm with two-photon excitation and emits light in the range of 460 nm3,53,54,55,56. FAD absorbs light of 900 nm with two-photon excitation and emits light in the range of 500 to 550 nm5,12,56,57. Intracellular NAD(P)H and FAD-based metabolic data was generated using time-correlated single photon counting (TCPSC) FLIM58. The microscope setup includes an upright AxioExaminer.Z1 (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany) with an xy-motorized stage, a Chameleon Ultra II two-photon titanium:sapphire laser (tunable range 690–1080 nm, 80 MHz repetition rate, 140 fs pulse width, Coherent, USA) and two hybrid GaAsP photon detectors (HPM-100-40, Becker&Hickl GmbH, Berlin, Germany). Prior to imaging, the organs were localised by transmission light illumination. For NAD(P)H and FAD lifetime imaging, fluorescence was two-photon excited with light of 740 nm followed by 900 nm, respectively. Light was focused on the analysed optical planes using a water immersion objective (LD C-Apochromat 40x/1.1 W, 421867-9970-000, Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany) for all measurements. 10 μM NADH dipotassium salt (N4505, Sigma-Aldrich, Germany) in PBS was used for the measurement of unbound NADH.
Tissue damage and the saturation of the FLIM detection system were prevented by the limitation of the total photon count rates to a maximum of 8 × 105 per second by laser power limitation to approximately 2.6 to 11.5 mW for 740 nm excitation and 10.4 to 39.0 mW for 900 nm excitation in the sample position by the internal acusto-optical modulator (AOM, Becker&Hickl GmbH, Berlin, Germany) measured with a powermeter (PM100A, ThorLabs, Dachau, Germany). Emitted light was spectrally split for specific detection with a beam splitter of 505 nm combined with synchronous emission of band pass-restricted spectral ranges of 450/30 nm and 525/39 nm (beam splitter and filters from AHF analysentechnik AG, Tübingen, Germany) for NAD(P)H and FAD, respectively. Images of different zoom factors and 512 × 512 pixel format were acquired using SPCM software version 9.80 (Becker&Hickl GmbH, Berlin, Germany) with a pixel dwell time of approximately 5 μs and 100 frames yielding a total scan time of approximately 180 s. 6 μm fluorescent beads were imaged for size estimates.
Fluorescence lifetime data analysis
The lifetimes of intracellular NAD(P)H and FAD were fitted two-exponentially with non-fixed parameters short lifetime (τ1) and long lifetime (τ2), a fixed scatter of “0” and fixed shift values for each image using SPCImage software version 6.5 (Becker&Hickl GmbH, Berlin, Germany). Mean NAD(P)H and FAD lifetimes τm were calculated by addition of the products of τ1 or τ2 with their respective fractions, a1% (unbound for NAD(P)H and protein-bound for FAD) and a2% (protein-bound for NAD(P)H and unbound for FAD) (τm = τ1 × a1% + τ2 × a2%) by the software.
Pixel selection according to localisation in the 2D images and phasor plots is shown using representative examples in the Supplementary information (Suppl. Figs. S1 and S2). In detail, for all cell types, regions of interest (ROIs) were selected manually in images of mean NAD(P)H lifetime with a defined colour range in order to exclude surrounding tissues. In images of enterocytes, SGCs, and FBCs, nuclei, if distinguishable, were also excluded from the ROIs. ROIs of images of NAD(P)H lifetime values were applied to corresponding images of FAD lifetime values. The means of the following lifetime parameters were exported: for NAD(P)H, the mean lifetime, the short and long lifetimes, and the fraction of the short lifetime; and, for FAD, the fraction of the short lifetime. The distribution of binned data from each sample was exported from SPCI for distribution histograms and for the separation of two populations for the short NAD(P)H lifetimes in enterocytes, SGCs, and FBCs. All statistics were performed, and all plots excluding the phasor plots were generated, in R (version 3.5.1) using RStudio (version 1.1.456). Labels were adjusted and distribution overlays generated using Inkscape (version 0.92). Identification of lifetime populations from the short lifetime distribution data of the ROIs of individual samples was performed by application of a mixed model (normalmixEM) using the mixtools package in R with the assumption of two clusters.
Phasor approach of lifetime analysis
The phasor plots represent fit-free graphical views of intensity decays and are calculated as described earlier using the SPCI software20. In detail, each point of the phasor plot is calculated by sine (s) and cosine (g) transformation of the fluorescence decay trace of each pixel of the image using the following equations:
The indices i and j are pixels of the image and si,j (ω) and gi,j (ω) are y and x coordinates, respectively, of the phasor plot. The laser repetition frequency was 80 MHz in our experiments. The fluorescence collected from each pixel of an image was thus transformed to a point in the phasor plot. The phasor localisation integrates the complexity of the decay and the individual lifetimes for each pixel of a FLIM image. Single lifetime species locate on the universal semicircle along which the lifetime decreases with increasing g on the x axis. Multiexponential lifetime species in which several decay behaviours localise vectorially added within the polygons defined by the contributing individual lifetimes species. The FLIM redox ratio (FLIRR) was calculated as the ratio of NAD(P)H-a2% and FAD-a1% with NAD(P)H-a2% as a2/(a1 + a2) of NAD(P)H parameters and FAD-a1% as a1/(a1 + a2) of FAD parameters25.
Data availability
The FLIM raw and processed data (.sdt and .img files) are stored in the OpARA repository, https://doi.org/10.25532/OPARA-37. All other data generated and analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author upon request.
References
Keller, L. Queen lifespan and colony characteristics in ants and termites. Insectes Sociaux 45, 235–246, https://doi.org/10.1007/s000400050084 (1998).
Patterson, G. H., Knobel, S. M., Arkhammar, P., Thastrup, O. & Piston, D. W. Separation of the glucose-stimulated cytoplasmic and mitochondrial NAD(P)H responses in pancreatic islet beta cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97, 5203–5207, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.090098797 (2000).
De Ruyck, J. et al. Towards the understanding of the absorption spectra of NAD(P)H/NAD(P)+ as a common indicator of dehydrogenase enzymatic activity. Chem. Phys. Lett. 450, 119–122, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cplett.2007.10.092 (2007).
Blacker, T. S. & Duchen, M. R. Investigating mitochondrial redox state using NADH and NADPH autofluorescence. Free Radic. Biol. Med. 100, 53–65, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2016.08.010 (2016).
Chance, B., Schoener, B., Oshino, R., Itshak, F. & Nakase, Y. Oxidation-reduction ratio studies of mitochondria in freeze-trapped samples. NADH and flavoprotein fluorescence signals. J. Biol. Chem. 254, 4764–4771 (1979).
Buurman, E. P. et al. Fluorescence lifetime imaging using a confocal laser scanning microscope. Scanning 14, 155–159, https://doi.org/10.1002/sca.4950140305 (1992).
Lakowicz, J., Szmacinski, H., Nowaczyk, K. & Johnson, M. Fluorescence lifetime imaging of free and protein-bound NADH. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89, 1271–1275, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.89.4.1271 (1992).
Scott, T. G., Spencer, R. D., Leonard, N. J. & Weber, G. Emission properties of NADH. Studies of fluorescence lifetimes and quantum efficiencies of NADH, AcPyADH, and simplified synthetic models. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 92, 687–&, https://doi.org/10.1021/ja00706a043 (1970).
Schneckenburger, H., Wagner, M., Weber, P., Strauss, W. & Sailer, R. Autofluorescence lifetime imaging of cultivated cells using a UV picosecond laser diode. J. Fluoresc. 14, 649–654, https://doi.org/10.1023/B:JOFL.0000039351.09916.cc (2004).
Yaseen, M. A. et al. In vivo imaging of cerebral energy metabolism with two-photon fluorescence lifetime microscopy of NADH. Biomed. Opt. Express 4, 307–321, https://doi.org/10.1364/BOE.4.000307 (2013).
Iweibo, I. Protein fluorescence and electronic energy transfer in the determination of molecular dimensions and rotational relaxation times of native and coenzyme-bound horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 446, 192–205, https://doi.org/10.1016/0005-2795(76)90110-0 (1976).
König, K. & Schneckenburger, H. Laser-induced autofluorescence for medical diagnosis. J. Fluoresc. 4, 17–40 (1994).
Yu, Q. & Heikal, A. A. Two-photon autofluorescence dynamics imaging reveals sensitivity of intracellular NADH concentration and conformation to cell physiology at the single-cell level. J. Photochem. Photobiol. 95, 46–57, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jphotobiol.2008.12.010 (2009).
Sharick, J. T. et al. Protein-bound NAD(P)H lifetime is sensitive to multiple fates of glucose carbon. Sci. Rep. 8, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-23691-x (2018).
Nakashima, N., Yoshihara, K., Tanaka, F. & Yagi, K. Picosecond fluorescence lifetime of the coenzyme of D-amino acid oxidase. J. Biol. Chem. 255, 5261–5263 (1980).
Skala, M. C. et al. In vivo multiphoton microscopy of NADH and FAD redox states, fluorescence lifetimes, and cellular morphology in precancerous epithelia. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 104, 19494–19499, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0708425104 (2007).
Meleshina, A. V. et al. Two-photon FLIM of NAD(P)H and FAD in mesenchymal stem cells undergoing either osteogenic or chondrogenic differentiation. Stem Cell Research & Therapy 8, https://doi.org/10.1186/s13287-017-0484-7 (2017).
Stringari, C., Nourse, J. L., Flanagan, L. A. & Gratton, E. Phasor fluorescence lifetime microscopy of free and protein-bound NADH reveals neural stem cell differentiation potential. PLoS One 7, e48014: 1–11, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048014 (2012).
Jameson, D., Gratton, E. & Hall, R. The measurement and analysis of heterogeneous emission by multifrequency phase and modulation fluorometry. Appl. Spectrosc. Rev. 20, 55–106, https://doi.org/10.1080/05704928408081716 (1984).
Digman, M. A., Caiolfa, V. R., Zamai, M. & Gratton, E. The phasor approach to fluorescence lifetime imaging analysis. Biophys. J. 94, L14–L16, https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.107.120154 (2008).
Stringari, C. et al. Phasor approach to fluorescence lifetime microscopy distinguishes different metabolic states of germ cells in a live tissue. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 108, 13582–13587, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1108161108 (2011).
Skala, M. & Ramanujam, N. Multiphoton redox ratio imaging for metabolic monitoring in vivo. Methods Mol. Biol. 594, 155–162, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-60761-411-1_11 (2010).
Meleshina, A. V. et al. Probing metabolic states of differentiating stem cells using two-photon FLIM. Sci. Rep. 6, 1–11, https://doi.org/10.1038/srep21853 (2016).
Quinn, K. P. et al. Quantitative metabolic imaging using endogenous fluorescence to detect stem cell differentiation. Sci. Rep. 3, 3432, https://doi.org/10.1038/srep03432 (2013).
Wallrabe, H. et al. Segmented cell analyses to measure redox states of autofluorescent NAD(P)H, FAD & Trp in cancer cells by FLIM. Sci. Rep. 8, 79: 1–11, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-18634-x (2018).
Stringari, C. et al. In vivo single-cell detection of metabolic oscillations in stem cells. Cell Rep. 10, 1–7, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.12.007 (2015).
Stringari, C. et al. Multicolor two-photon imaging of endogenous fluorophores in living tissues by wavelength mixing. Sci. Rep. 7, 3792: 1–11, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-03359-8 (2017).
Drozdowicz-Tomsia, K. et al. Multiphoton fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy reveals free-to-bound NADH ratio changes associated with metabolic inhibition. J. Biomed. Opt. 19, 1–13, https://doi.org/10.1117/1.jbo.19.8.086016 (2014).
Lakner, P. H., Monaghan, M. G., Möller, Y., Olayioye, M. A. & Schenke-Layland, K. Applying phasor approach analysis of multiphoton FLIM measurements to probe the metabolic activity of three-dimensional in vitro cell culture models. Sci. Rep. 7, https://doi.org/10.1038/srep42730 (2017).
Shah, A. T., Heaster, T. M. & Skala, M. C. Metabolic imaging of head and neck cancer organoids. PLoS One 12, e0170415, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170415 (2017).
Lukina, M. M. et al. Metabolic cofactors NAD(P)H and FAD as potential indicators of cancer cell response to chemotherapy with paclitaxel. Biochim. Biophys. Acta Gen. Subj. 1862, 1693–1700, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbagen.2018.04.021 (2018).
Gibb, Z., Lambourne, S. R. & Aitken, R. J. The paradoxical relationship between stallion fertility and oxidative stress. Biol. Reprod. 91, 1–10, https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.114.118539 (2014).
Aitken, R. J., Gibb, Z., Baker, M. A., Drevet, J. & Gharagozloo, P. Causes and consequences of oxidative stress in spermatozoa. Reprod. Fertil. Dev. 28, 1–10, https://doi.org/10.1071/RD15325 (2016).
Aitken, R. J. Reactive oxygen species as mediators of sperm capacitation and pathological damage. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 84, 1039–1052, https://doi.org/10.1002/mrd.22871 (2017).
Orr, T. J. & Brennan, P. L. Sperm storage: distinguishing selective processes and evaluating criteria. Trends Ecol. Evol. (Amst.) 30, 261–272, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2015.03.006 (2015).
Ribou, A. C. & Reinhardt, K. Reduced metabolic rate and oxygen radicals production in stored insect sperm. Proc. R. Soc. B. 279, 2196–2203, https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2011.2422 (2012).
Reinhardt, K. & Ribou, A.-C. Females become infertile as the stored sperm’s oxygen radicals increase. Sci. Rep. 3, https://doi.org/10.1038/srep02888 (2013).
Reinhardt, K., Breunig, H. G., Uchugonova, A. & König, K. Sperm metabolism is altered during storage by female insects: evidence from two-photon autofluorescence lifetime measurements in bedbugs. J. Royal Soc. Interface 12, 20150609, https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2015.0609 (2015).
Paynter, E. et al. Insights into the molecular basis of long-term storage and survival of sperm in the honeybee (Apis mellifera). Sci. Rep. 7, https://doi.org/10.1038/srep40236 (2017).
Marianes, A. & Spradling, A. C. Physiological and stem cell compartmentalization within the Drosophila midgut. Elife 2, e00886, https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00886 (2013).
Lefèvre, G. & Jonsson, U. B. Sperm transfer, storage, displacement, and utilization in Drosophila melanogaster. Genetics 47, 1719–1736 (1962).
Farkaš, R. & Sláma, K. Respiratory metabolism of salivary glands during the late larval and prepupal development of Drosophila melanogaster. J. Insect Physiol. 81, 109–117, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinsphys.2015.06.013 (2015).
MacLeod, J. The metabolism of human spermatozoa. Am. J. Physiol. 132, 193–201 (1941).
Storey, B. T. Mammalian sperm metabolism: oxygen and sugar, friend and foe. Int. J. Dev. Biol. 52, 427–437, https://doi.org/10.1387/ijdb.072522bs (2008).
Glazener, C. M., Ford, W. C. & Hull, M. G. The prognostic power of the post-coital test for natural conception depends on duration of infertility. Hum. Reprod. 15, 1953–1957, https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/15.9.1953 (2000).
World Health Organization. WHO Laboratory Manual for the Examination and Processing of Human Semen, 5 edn. (WHO Press, 2010).
Perotti, M. E. The mitochondrial derivative of the spermatozoon of Drosophila before and after fertilization. J. Ultrastruct. Res. 44, 181–198, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-5320(73)80055-3 (1973).
Osanai, M. & Chen, P. S. A comparative study on the arginine degradation cascade for sperm maturation of Bombyx mori and Drosophila melanogaster. Amino Acids 5, 341–350, https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00806952 (1993).
Laurinyecz, B. et al. Sperm-Leucylaminopeptidases are required for male fertility as structural components of mitochondrial paracrystalline material in Drosophila melanogaster sperm. PLoS Genet. 15, e1007987: 1–24, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007987 (2019).
Esteva, A. et al. Dermatologist-level classification of skin cancer with deep neural networks. Nature 542, 115–118, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature21056 (2017).
Seidenari, S. et al. Multiphoton laser tomography and fluorescence lifetime imaging of melanoma: Morphologic features and quantitative data for sensitive and specific non-invasive diagnostics. PLoS One 8, e70682, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070682 (2013).
Dym, O. & Eisenberg, D. Sequence-structure analysis of FAD-containing proteins. Protein Sci. 10, 1712–1728, https://doi.org/10.1110/ps.12801 (2001).
Chance, B. & Williams, G. R. Respiratory enzymes in oxidative phosphorylation. II. Difference spectra. J Biol Chem. 217, 395–407 (1955).
Paul, R. & Schneckenburger, H. Oxygen concentration and the oxidation-reduction state of yeast: Determination of free/bound NADH and flavins by time-resolved spectroscopy. Naturwissenschaften 83, 32–35, https://doi.org/10.1007/s001140050243 (1996).
Kierdaszuk, B., Malak, H., Gryczynski, I., Callis, P. & Lakowicz, J. R. Fluorescence of reduced nicotinamides using one- and two-photon excitation. Biophys. Chem. 62, 1–13, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0301-4622(96)02182-5 (1996).
Huang, S., Heikal, A. A. & Webb, W. W. Two-photon fluorescence spectroscopy and microscopy of NAD(P)H and flavoprotein. Biophys. J. 82, 2811–2825, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0006-3495(02)75621-X (2002).
Galland, P. & Senger, H. The role of flavins as photoreceptors. J. Photochem. Photobiol. B: Biology 1, 277–294, https://doi.org/10.1016/1011-1344(88)85016-4 (1988).
Becker, W. et al. Fluorescence lifetime imaging by time-correlated single-photon counting. Microscopy Research and Technique 63, 58–66, https://doi.org/10.1002/jemt.10421 (2003).
Acknowledgements
C.W. and K.R. are supported by the Zukunftskonzept of the Technische Universität Dresden awarded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft through the Excellence Initiative. We thank all members of the tudaz lab for scientific discussion, Christin Froschauer, Cornelia Thodte, and Christian Kolberg for technical help, Ulf Wetzker for support with the population analysis, and Biz Turnell, Adam Dobson, Marina Shirmanova, and Wolfgang Becker for critical reading of the manuscript. We acknowledge support by the Open Access Publication Funds of the SLUB/TU Dresden.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
C.W. and K.R. conceived the experiments. C.W. performed the experiments and analysed the data. Both authors wrote the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
In this paper we use equipment and software purchased from Becker & Hickl GmbH, Berlin, Germany. Two years after the purchase, C.W. gave an invited talk at the 8th Advanced Optical Methods Workshop held in November 2018 at Shenzhen University, China, which was co-organized by Becker & Hickl GmbH, Berlin, Germany. The organizers provided travel and accommodation. K.R. declares no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Wetzker, C., Reinhardt, K. Distinct metabolic profiles in Drosophila sperm and somatic tissues revealed by two-photon NAD(P)H and FAD autofluorescence lifetime imaging. Sci Rep 9, 19534 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-56067-w
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-56067-w
This article is cited by
-
Label-free multimodal imaging of infected Galleria mellonella larvae
Scientific Reports (2022)
-
Somatic production of reactive oxygen species does not predict its production in sperm cells across Drosophila melanogaster lines
BMC Research Notes (2021)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.