| Literature DB >> 24019481 |
Nicolas Dénervaud1, Johannes Becker, Ricard Delgado-Gonzalo, Pascal Damay, Arun S Rajkumar, Michael Unser, David Shore, Felix Naef, Sebastian J Maerkl.
Abstract
Observing cellular responses to perturbations is central to generating and testing hypotheses in biology. We developed a massively parallel microchemostat array capable of growing and observing 1,152 yeast-GFP strains on the single-cell level with 20 min time resolution. We measured protein abundance and localization changes in 4,085 GFP-tagged strains in response to methyl methanesulfonate and analyzed 576 GFP strains in five additional conditions for a total of more than 10,000 unique experiments, providing a systematic view of the yeast proteome in flux. We observed that processing bodies formed rapidly and synchronously in response to UV irradiation, and in conjunction with 506 deletion-GFP strains, identified four gene disruptions leading to abnormal ribonucleotide-diphosphate reductase (Rnr4) localization. Our microchemostat platform enables the large-scale interrogation of proteomes in flux and permits the concurrent observation of protein abundance, localization, cell size, and growth parameters on the single-cell level for thousands of microbial cultures in one experiment.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage response; cell arrays; high-content imaging; microfluidics; yeast proteomics
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24019481 PMCID: PMC3785771 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1308265110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205