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1.
Methods ; 60(2): 214-24, 2013 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23643864

ABSTRACT

We describe a method for nanoimaging interfacial dynamics and ligand-receptor binding at surfaces of live cells in 3-D. The imaging probe is a 1-µm diameter glass bead confined by a soft laser trap to create a "cloud" of fluctuating states. Using a facile on-line method of video image analysis, the probe displacements are reported at ~10 ms intervals with bare precisions (±SD) of 4-6 nm along the optical axis (elevation) and 2 nm in the transverse directions. We demonstrate how the Brownian distributions are analyzed to characterize the free energy potential of each small probe in 3-D taking into account the blur effect of its motions during CCD image capture. Then, using the approach to image interactions of a labeled probe with lamellae of leukocytic cells spreading on cover-glass substrates, we show that deformations of the soft distribution in probe elevations provide both a sensitive long-range sensor for defining the steric topography of a cell lamella and a fast telemetry for reporting rare events of probe binding with its surface receptors. Invoking established principles of Brownian physics and statistical thermodynamics, we describe an off-line method of super resolution that improves precision of probe separations from a non-reactive steric boundary to ~1 nm.


Subject(s)
Cell Surface Extensions/metabolism , Algorithms , Calibration , Cell Surface Extensions/ultrastructure , Fibronectins/metabolism , Humans , Integrin alpha4beta1/metabolism , Jurkat Cells , Kinetics , Ligands , Likelihood Functions , Markov Chains , Microscopy, Video/methods , Models, Biological , Nanotechnology/methods , Optical Tweezers , Protein Binding , Surface Properties , Thermodynamics
2.
PLoS One ; 5(4): e10082, 2010 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20419164

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The transport of labeled G-actin from the mid-lamella region to the leading edge in a highly motile malignant rat fibroblast line has been studied using fluorescence localization after photobleaching or FLAP, and the transit times recorded in these experiments were so fast that simple diffusion was deemed an insufficient explanation (see Zicha et al., Science, v. 300, pp. 142-145 [1]). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We re-examine the Zicha FLAP experiments using a two-phase reactive interpenetrating flow formalism to model the cytoplasm and the transport dynamics of bleached and unbleached actin. By allowing an improved treatment of effects related to the retrograde flow of the cytoskeleton and of the geometry and finite thickness of the lamella, this new analysis reveals a mechanism that can realistically explain the timing and the amplitude of all the FLAP signals observed in [1] without invoking special transport modalities. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We conclude that simple diffusion is sufficient to explain the observed transport rates, and that variations in the transport of labeled actin through the lamella are minor and not likely to be the cause of the observed physiological variations among different segments of the leading edge. We find that such variations in labeling can easily arise from differences and changes in the microscopic actin dynamics inside the edge compartment, and that the key dynamical parameter in this regard is the so-called "dilatation rate" (the velocity of cytoskeletal retrograde flow divided by a characteristic dimension of the edge compartment where rapid polymerization occurs). If our dilatation hypothesis is correct, the transient kinetics of bleached actin relocalization constitute a novel and very sensitive method for probing the cytoskeletal dynamics in leading edge micro-environments which are otherwise very difficult to directly interrogate.


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Cytoplasm/metabolism , Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Models, Biological , Photobleaching , Animals , Biological Transport , Cell Line, Tumor , Diffusion , Fibroblasts/ultrastructure , Fluorescent Dyes , Kinetics , Rats
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