Addendum: Gouriou et al. ANT2-Mediated ATP Import into Mitochondria Protects against Hypoxia Lethal Injury. Cells 2020, 9, 2542

The authors and the Cells Editorial Office would like to add the section “Materials and Methods”, which was missing in the original version [...]

The authors and the Cells Editorial Office would like to add the section "Materials and Methods", which was missing in the original version [1]. We apologize for any inconvenience caused and state that the scientific conclusions are unaffected.

pH Sensitivity of the YFP-Based Biosensor in OGD Experiments
YFP-based FRET biosensors are known to be pH sensitive, which makes them artifact prone. Indeed, the original cameleons suffered from significant pH sensitivity, which has been improved in order to decrease the pKa of the acceptor YFP. Two mutations within EYFP (V68L and Q69K) were used to decrease its pKa to 6.1 [20][21][22]. The situation becomes even worse in the specific case of the acidosis occurring during hypoxia. However, this matter has rarely been assessed in the literature. In this study, we measured the ATPspecific response of an ATeam sensor in MFN2-KD cells during ODG by quantifying its pHsensitive drop in the FRET signal by means of an engineered cameleon fluorescent biosensor deprived of the ligand domain, "null sensor" ( Figure S6). We provided a calibration of this null sensor in different pH solutions from pH 8 to pH 5.3 and estimated the cytosolic pH of our cells as 6.7 during OGD. In addition, our experiments clearly demonstrated that less than 20% of the ATeam variation was subject to pH sensitivity. Although, this result prevents a precise quantification of ATP variation, it does not prevent a qualitative analysis of the ATP level through the OGD-reperfusion sequence. The major drawback in KO models lies in the plasticity of the genome, which enables adaptation/compensation at the gene level, towards a novel equilibrium of the molecular network being reached. Although it is always tempting to infer that a modified phenotype is directly caused by the suppression of the target gene, this should not be assumed so casually without controlling the state of the whole molecular network. Regarding the controversies in the literature on MFN2 models, and because we aimed at measuring the early molecular adaptations to MFN2 loss and their effect on cell in hypoxia-reoxygenation, we decided to use a KD model of MFN2. As reported in this study, we observed strong phenotypic modifications only two days after silencing of MFN2, which confirmed our intuition that transient KD can be a good model to probe the early events induced by changes in the expression of a target gene.

Cell Lysis and Western Blotting
Cell lysates were obtained by treating the cell monolayer with RIPA buffer supplemented with 1 mM Na 3 VO 4 , 1 mM DTT, 20 mM NAF, 5mM EDTA, and a cocktail of proteases inhibitor. Total protein concentration was determined using the bicinchoninic acid method (BCA, Interchim, Montluçon, France), and 25 µg of protein from each sample was loaded on 12% sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel (SDS-PAGE). Migration was performed for 15 min at 90 V, followed by 60 min at 130 V. Proteins were then blotted on a polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane by electro transfer (Trans-Blot Turbo Transfer, Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA). The PVDF membrane was incubated at room temperature for 1 h with 5% milk in PBS for blocking and then incubated overnight at 4 • C in the same buffer with the primary antibody. Secondary horseradish peroxidase (HRP) coupled antibodies, an ECL (entry-level peroxidase substrate for enhanced chemiluminescence) plus kit, and Western Blotting detection system from GE Healthcare were then used to reveal antigen-antibody complexes. The band intensity was determined using ImageLab software (Bio-Rad).

Oxygen-Glucose Deprivation (OGD) Experiments
Cells were washed twice in a HEPES-buffered solution containing 140 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl 2 , 2 mM CaCl 2 , 10 mM HEPES, 2 mM Na 2 S 2 O 4 (pH 7.4) with NaOH at 37 • C, placed into a specifically manufactured bio-incubator (NewBrunswik, an Eppendorf company, Galaxy 48R), and connected with a 100% N 2 bottle at 37 • C. Oxygen levels were monitored at 0.5% O 2 by the system. After the OGD period, cells were washed twice with a HEPES-buffered solution containing 10 mM glucose and cultured in complete medium for 4 h in an incubator with 95% air and 5% CO 2 at 37 • C. For the OGD experiments, on the microscope an Okolab system with a specific hypoxic chamber was used which controlled the environment (temperature, humidity, oxygen levels).

Wide-Field Microscopy for ATP, NADH/NAD + , and Ca 2+ Live Cell Imaging
Cells were imaged on an Leica epifluorescence microscope using 40× objective. The The proportion of aerobic-dependent and anaerobic-dependent ATP synthesis within the dynamic range of the Ateam sensors was calculated as following: The minimal (F YFP /F CFP ) fluorescence ratio value, (F YFP /F CFP ) min , corresponding to the minimal sensitivity of Ateam probes to ATP was determined in cells incubated with oxygen/glucose-deprivation in the presence of 2 µM oligomycin A. At a constant illumination power and exposure time set on the microscope, the (F YFP /F CFP ) min value was 3858 ± 0.029 (n = 409). (F YFP /F CFP ) min was first subtracted from the (F YFP /F CFP ) fluorescence ratio values at all times to obtain the corrected (F YFP /F CFP ) values. Corrected (F YFP /F CFP ) values measured in presence of an inhibitor were normalized by the corrected (F YFP /F CFP ) values measured in the absence of this inhibitor (control). Finally, this ratio was subtracted by (1). The whole formula is: Unlike Ateam and Ca-sensing probes, the Peredox probe does not utilize FRET measurements but works by the principal of direct quantification of fluorescence intensity. As the direct quantification of fluorescence intensity is biased, we applied the method proposed by [15]. In this procedure, the steady-state green/red fluorescence ratio is normalized by the that measured after a 10 mM pyruvate treatment on cells. This high dose of pyruvate enhances the lactate dehydrogenase activity, which consumes NADH at a higher rate than it can be regenerated. Normalization of the (F green /F red ) basal ratio by this minimum Peredox signal, (F green /F red ) pyruvate , prevents artefacts related to variations in the probe concentration.

Calcein Cobalt Protocol
Kinetics of mPTP opening was measured in live cells by means of the well-established calcein-cobalt assay. Briefly, cells were loaded with 1 µM calcein-AM in a Ca 2+ -containing physiological solution (CCB) for 15 min at room temperature. Cells were washed twice and incubated for another 30 min with 2 mM cobalt chloride and 200 µM sulfinpyrazon in CCB. Using a Leica wide-field microscopy system, cells were imaged every 5 s under resting conditions for 1-2 min before application of 1 µM ionomycin, which triggers the mPTP opening. Calcein-AM was excited using a GFP excitation filter and emission was performed with a FITC filter. A decrease in mitochondrial calcein fluorescence reflected the opening of mPTP. For data analysis, the background was subtracted and curves were normalized with the basal fluorescence.

FACS Analysis of Cellular Viability and Mitochondrial Membrane Potential
FACS analyses of propidium iodide positive cells were performed 4 h after OGD. Cells were harvested with Accutase (GE Healthcare, L11-007), centrifuged, and resuspended in complete medium. PI at a 1 µg/mL final quantity was added to perform FACS analysis by Fortessa X-20 (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA, USA) (λex 530 nm, λem 620 nm). FACS analysis of mitochondrial membrane potential was performed with two different dyes. TMRM at 20 nM (Fortessa X20::λex 561, λem 580 nm) and DILC1(5) at 20 nM (Fortessa X20::λex 640, λem 658 nm). To obtain a minimum basal value for mitochondrial membrane potential with each dye, cells were incubated with 10 µM FCCP for 10 min. TMRM fluorescence was normalized with the minimum fluorescence intensity obtained after FCCP treatment.

RNA Extraction and Real-Time PCR
Two days after transfection, cells were harvested by trypsination and total RNA isolation was performed using Trizol technique, according to the manufacturer's protocol, and reverse-transcribed using a High-capacity RNA-to-cDNA kit (Applied Biosystems, 4387406, Foster City, CA, USA). Real-time PCR was performed using the StepOnePlus real-time PCR system (Applied Biosystems) and Fast SYBR Green Master Mix (Applied Biosystems, 4385612) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Technical triplicates were made for each condition. All primers used are shown in the Key Resource table.

Principal Component Analysis
Data were subjected to the multivariate statistical method of principal component analysis (PCA) implemented in R language version 3.3.3, freely available at https://cran. r-project.org/ (accessed on 2 August 2021). PCA is an unsupervised method that aims to reduce data dimensionality via identifying a smaller number of uncorrelated variables known as principal components (PC). The PC1 axis represents efficiently the dataset and accounts for the highest variation in the original data. However, the second PC, perpendicular to PC1, accounts for most of the remaining variances. In order to analyze and visualize the data, the prcomp(), fviz_pca_ind(), and fviz_pca_var() functions, supplied with the "factoextra"and "ggplot2" packages, were used, respectively.