Literature DB >> 31244098

Characterizing Large-Scale Receptor Clustering on the Single Cell Level: A Comparative Plasmon Coupling and Fluorescence Superresolution Microscopy Study.

Sandy Zhang1, Björn M Reinhard1.   

Abstract

Spatial clustering of cell membrane receptors has been indicated to play a regulatory role in signal initiation, and the distribution of receptors on the cell surface may represent a potential biomarker. To realize its potential for diagnostic purposes, scalable assays capable of mapping spatial receptor heterogeneity with high throughput are needed. In this work, we use gold nanoparticle (NP) labels with an average diameter of 72.17 ± 2.16 nm as bright markers for large-scale epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) clustering in hyperspectral plasmon coupling microscopy and compare the obtained clustering maps with those obtained through fluorescence superresolution microscopy (direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy, dSTORM). Our dSTORM experiments reveal average EGFR cluster sizes of 172 ± 99 and 150 ± 90 nm for MDA-MB-468 and HeLa, respectively. The cluster sizes decrease after EGFR activation. Hyperspectral imaging of the NP labels shows that differences in the EGFR cluster sizes are accompanied by differences in the average separations between electromagnetically coupled NPs. Because of the distance dependence of plasmon coupling, changes in the average interparticle separation result in significant spectral shifts. For the experimental conditions investigated in this work, hyperspectral plasmon coupling microscopy of NP labels identified the same trends in large-scale EGFR clustering as dSTORM, but the NP imaging approach provided the information in a fraction of the time. Both dSTORM and hyperspectral plasmon coupling microscopy confirm the cortical actin network as one structural component that determines the average size of EGFR clusters.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31244098      PMCID: PMC6768829          DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b05176

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem B        ISSN: 1520-5207            Impact factor:   2.991


  80 in total

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8.  Single-molecule analysis of epidermal growth factor signaling that leads to ultrasensitive calcium response.

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9.  Quantum dot ligands provide new insights into erbB/HER receptor-mediated signal transduction.

Authors:  Diane S Lidke; Peter Nagy; Rainer Heintzmann; Donna J Arndt-Jovin; Janine N Post; Hernan E Grecco; Elizabeth A Jares-Erijman; Thomas M Jovin
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10.  The EGF receptor is an actin-binding protein.

Authors:  J C den Hartigh; P M van Bergen en Henegouwen; A J Verkleij; J Boonstra
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  3 in total

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2.  Development of a Simple Kinetic Mathematical Model of Aggregation of Particles or Clustering of Receptors.

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3.  Nanoscale Molecular Quantification of Stem Cell-Hydrogel Interactions.

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  3 in total

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