Mitochondria, as energy factories,
participate in many metabolic
processes and play vital roles in cell life. Most human diseases are
caused by mitochondrial dysfunction, and mitochondrial temperature
is an important indicator of mitochondrial function. Despite the biological
importance of mitochondria, there are few tools for detecting changes
in mitochondrial temperature in living organisms. Here, we report
on a thermosensitive rhodamine B (RhB)-derived fluorogenic probe (RhBIV)
that enables fluorescent labeling of cell mitochondria at concentrations
as low as 1 μM. We demonstrate that this probe exhibits a temperature-dependent
response in cell mitochondria. Furthermore, in mice, it has a long
half-life (t1/2) and is primarily enriched
in the liver. This unique thermosensitive probe offers a simple, nondestructive
method for longitudinal monitoring of mitochondrial temperature both in vitro and in vivo to elucidate fundamental
physiological and pathological processes related to mitochondrial
function