9 research outputs found
Dropception: Double Emulsion Single Cell Encapsulation and FACS
Double emulsion single cell encapsulation accompanying recent manuscrip
Mechanically resolved imaging of bacteria using expansion microscopy.
Imaging dense and diverse microbial communities has broad applications in basic microbiology and medicine, but remains a grand challenge due to the fact that many species adopt similar morphologies. While prior studies have relied on techniques involving spectral labeling, we have developed an expansion microscopy method (μExM) in which bacterial cells are physically expanded prior to imaging. We find that expansion patterns depend on the structural and mechanical properties of the cell wall, which vary across species and conditions. We use this phenomenon as a quantitative and sensitive phenotypic imaging contrast orthogonal to spectral separation to resolve bacterial cells of different species or in distinct physiological states. Focusing on host-microbe interactions that are difficult to quantify through fluorescence alone, we demonstrate the ability of μExM to distinguish species through an in vitro defined community of human gut commensals and in vivo imaging of a model gut microbiota, and to sensitively detect cell-envelope damage caused by antibiotics or previously unrecognized cell-to-cell phenotypic heterogeneity among pathogenic bacteria as they infect macrophages
Alleviating Cell Lysate-Induced Inhibition to Enable RT-PCR from Single Cells in Picoliter-Volume Double Emulsion Droplets
Microfluidic droplet assays enable single-cell polymerase
chain
reaction (PCR) and sequencing analyses at unprecedented scales, with
most methods encapsulating cells within nanoliter-sized single emulsion
droplets (water-in-oil). Encapsulating cells within picoliter double
emulsion (DE) (water-in-oil-in-water) allows sorting droplets with
commercially available fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) machines,
making it possible to isolate single cells based on phenotypes of
interest for downstream analyses. However, sorting DE droplets with
standard cytometers requires small droplets that can pass FACS nozzles.
This poses challenges for molecular biology, as prior reports suggest
that reverse transcription (RT) and PCR amplification cannot proceed
efficiently at volumes below 1 nL due to cell lysate-induced inhibition.
To overcome this limitation, we used a plate-based RT-PCR assay designed
to mimic reactions in picoliter droplets to systematically quantify
and ameliorate the inhibition. We find that RT-PCR is blocked by lysate-induced
cleavage of nucleic acid probes and primers, which can be efficiently
alleviated through heat lysis. We further show that the magnitude
of inhibition depends on the cell type, but that RT-PCR can proceed
in low-picoscale reaction volumes for most mouse and human cell lines
tested. Finally, we demonstrate one-step RT-PCR from single cells
in 20 pL DE droplets with fluorescence quantifiable via FACS. These
results open up new avenues for improving picoscale droplet RT-PCR
reactions and expanding microfluidic droplet-based single-cell analysis
technologies
Maintenance of neural progenitor cell stemness in 3D hydrogels requires matrix remodelling
Neural progenitor cell (NPC) culture within three-dimensional (3D) hydrogels is an attractive strategy for expanding a therapeutically relevant number of stem cells. However, relatively little is known about how 3D material properties such as stiffness and degradability affect the maintenance of NPC stemness in the absence of differentiation factors. Over a physiologically relevant range of stiffness from \ue2 1/40.5 to 50 kPa, stemness maintenance did not correlate with initial hydrogel stiffness. In contrast, hydrogel degradation was both correlated with, and necessary for, maintenance of NPC stemness. This requirement for degradation was independent of cytoskeletal tension generation and presentation of engineered adhesive ligands, instead relying on matrix remodelling to facilitate cadherin-mediated cell-cell contact and promote ?-catenin signalling. In two additional hydrogel systems, permitting NPC-mediated matrix remodelling proved to be a generalizable strategy for stemness maintenance in 3D. Our findings have identified matrix remodelling, in the absence of cytoskeletal tension generation, as a previously unknown strategy to maintain stemness in 3D