| Literature DB >> 26777522 |
Martin Mistrik1, Eva Vesela1, Tomas Furst1, Hana Hanzlikova2, Ivo Frydrych1, Jan Gursky1, Dusana Majera1, Jiri Bartek1,2,3.
Abstract
Laser micro-irradiation is a technology widely used in the DNA damage response, checkpoint signaling, chromatin remodeling and related research fields, to assess chromatin modifications and recruitment of diverse DNA damage sensors, mediators and repair proteins to sites of DNA lesions. While this approach has aided numerous discoveries related to cell biology, maintenance of genome integrity, aging and cancer, it has so far been limited by a tedious manual definition of laser-irradiated subcellular regions, with the ensuing restriction to only a small number of cells treated and analyzed in a single experiment. Here, we present an improved and versatile alternative to the micro-irradiation approach: Quantitative analysis of photo-manipulated samples using innovative settings of standard laser-scanning microscopes. Up to 200 cells are simultaneously exposed to a laser beam in a defined pattern of collinear rays. The induced striation pattern is then automatically evaluated by a simple algorithm, which provides a quantitative assessment of various laser-induced phenotypes in live or fixed cells. Overall, this new approach represents a more robust alternative to existing techniques, and provides a versatile tool for a wide range of applications in biomedicine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26777522 PMCID: PMC4726120 DOI: 10.1038/srep19567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Method introduction.
(a) Visualization of the striation pattern on a layer of fluorescent paint. (b) Striation pattern induced by a 355 nm laser (32 lines/field) in BrdU pre-sensitized U-2-OS-MDC1-GFP cells. DNA damage is visualized by recruitment of ectopically expressed MDC1-GFP protein. (c) Striation pattern bleached by a 488 nm laser (32 lines/field) in U-2-OS cells ectopically expressing histone H2B-GFP. (d) Evolution of the striation pattern over time. Cell line and DNA damage induction were the same as in (b). (e) Automatic stripe recognition by the software in the nucleus based on known values (gauge and position of the stripe) and additional fitting of recognized stripes. (f) Typical evolution of striation pattern after DNA damage caused by a 355 nm laser irradiation (32 lines/field, 1 iteration) in BrdU pre-sensitized U-2-OS-MDC1-GFP cells. The curve is plotted as medians of measure of striation (MS) values at indicated time points. The following parameters are used to describe the curve: Amp (amplitude, the maximum of MS over all time points), Tpeak (time to reach maximum MS), Relax (slope of the line fitted to MS values after Tpeak). (g) Typical evolution of striation pattern after bleaching. FRAP curve is formed by median values of MS at each time-point. The following parameters are used to describe the curve: Amp (amplitude, the minimum of MS), Relax30 (slope of the line fitted to MS values between 1 min and 30 min). Used cell line is the same as in (c).
Figure 2Method application.
(a) Summary table for three reporter cell lines addressing parameters of DDR curve, Amp (amplitude, the maximum of MS over all time points), Tpeak (time to reach maximum MS), Relax (slope of the line fitted to DDR curve after Tpeak), Relax30 (slope of the line fitted to DDR curve after 30 min). The effects are color-coded: red – parameter upregulated, blue – downregulated, grey – no significant effect, Kruskal-Wallis test, p < 0.05. (b) Representative graphs of MS median values for selected compounds are showing differential reporter-dependent response (the parameters with significant change are listed in the graph titles), Kruskal-Wallis test, p < 0.05. (c) Illustrative graph of MS median values for H2B-GFP recovery after bleaching (FRAP). Bleaching was performed either with a 355 nm or 488 nm laser (32 lines/field) to the same level, Kruskal-Wallis test (difference in amplitude is non-significant, p = 0.87). Relax30 shows significant change (p < 1.E-4). (d) Illustrative images of U-2-OS-H2B-GFP cells bleached by a 355 nm or 488 nm laser and evolution of the striation pattern over time.