111 research outputs found
Far‐Red Organic Fluorophores Contain a Fluorescent Impurity
Far‐red organic fluorophores commonly used in traditional and super‐resolution localization microscopy are found to contain a fluorescent impurity with green excitation and near‐red emission. This near‐red fluorescent impurity can interfere with some multicolor stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy/photoactivated localization microscopy measurements in live cells and produce subtle artifacts in chemically fixed cells. We additionally describe alternatives to avoid artifacts in super‐resolution localization microscopy. A near‐red fluorescent impurity is characterized in several commonly used far‐red fluorescent dyes. This impurity can lead to artifacts in live‐cell multicolor super‐resolution measurements, subtle artifacts in chemically fixed cells, and highlights the importance of controls in super‐resolution imaging.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108014/1/2240_ftp.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108014/2/cphc_201402002_sm_miscellaneous_information.pd
Line tensions, correlation lengths, and critical exponents in lipid membranes near critical points
Membranes containing a wide variety of ternary mixtures of high chain-melting
temperature lipids, low chain-melting temperature lipids, and cholesterol
undergo lateral phase separartion into coexisting liquid phases at a
miscibility transition. When membranes are prepared from a ternary lipid
mixture at a critical composition, they pass through a miscibility critical
point at the transition temperature. Since the critical temperature is
typically on the order of room temperature, membranes provide an unusual
opportunity in which to perform a quantitative study of biophysical systems
that exhibit critical phenomena in the two-dimensional Ising universality
class. As a critical point is approached from either high or low temperature,
the scale of fluctuations in lipid composition, set by the correlation length,
diverges. In addition, as a critical point is approached from low temperature,
the line tension between coexisting phases decreases to zero. Here we
quantitatively evaluate the temperature dependence of line tension between
liquid domains and of fluctuation correlation lengths in lipid membranes in
order to extract a critical exponent, nu. We obtain nu=1.2 plus or minus 0.2,
consistent with the Ising model prediction nu=1. We also evaluate the
probability distributions of pixel intensities in fluoresence images of
membranes. From the temperature dependence of these distributions above the
critical temperature, we extract an independent critical exponent beta=0.124
plus or minus 0.03 which is consistent with the Ising prediction of beta=1/8.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
Liquid general anesthetics lower critical temperatures in plasma membrane vesicles
A large and diverse array of small hydrophobic molecules induce general
anesthesia. Their efficacy as anesthetics has been shown to correlate both with
their affinity for a hydrophobic environment and with their potency in
inhibiting certain ligand gated ion channels. Here we explore the effects that
n-alcohols and other liquid anesthetics have on the two-dimensional miscibility
critical point observed in cell derived giant plasma membrane vesicles (GPMVs).
We show that anesthetics depress the critical temperature (Tc) of these GPMVs
without strongly altering the ratio of the two liquid phases found below Tc.
The magnitude of this affect is consistent across n-alcohols when their
concentration is rescaled by the median anesthetic concentration (AC50) for
tadpole anesthesia, but not when plotted against the overall concentration in
solution. At AC50 we see a 4{\deg}C downward shift in Tc, much larger than is
typically seen in the main chain transition at these anesthetic concentrations.
GPMV miscibility critical temperatures are also lowered to a similar extent by
propofol, phenylethanol, and isopropanol when added at anesthetic
concentrations, but not by tetradecanol or 2,6 diterbutylphenol, two structural
analogs of general anesthetics that are hydrophobic but have no anesthetic
potency. We propose that liquid general anesthetics provide an experimental
tool for lowering critical temperatures in plasma membranes of intact cells,
which we predict will reduce lipid-mediated heterogeneity in a way that is
complimentary to increasing or decreasing cholesterol. Also, several possible
implications of our results are discussed in the context of current models of
anesthetic action on ligand gated ion channels.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
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Criticality of plasma membrane lipids reflects activation state of macrophage cells.
Signalling is of particular importance in immune cells, and upstream in the signalling pathway many membrane receptors are functional only as complexes, co-locating with particular lipid species. Work over the last 15 years has shown that plasma membrane lipid composition is close to a critical point of phase separation, with evidence that cells adapt their composition in ways that alter the proximity to this thermodynamic point. Macrophage cells are a key component of the innate immune system, are responsive to infections and regulate the local state of inflammation. We investigate changes in the plasma membrane's proximity to the critical point as a response to stimulation by various pro- and anti-inflammatory agents. Pro-inflammatory (interferon γ, Kdo 2-Lipid A, lipopolysaccharide) perturbations induce an increase in the transition temperature of giant plasma membrane vesicles; anti-inflammatory interleukin 4 has the opposite effect. These changes recapitulate complex plasma membrane composition changes, and are consistent with lipid criticality playing a master regulatory role: being closer to critical conditions increases membrane protein activity.Research was funded by EUMarie Curie action ITN TransPol (EC), NIH-R01GM110052 and NSF10 MCB1552439 (SLV), Cambridge University Commonwealth, European and International Trust 11 (JS) ITN BioPol (PC), and Wellcome Trust Investigator grant 08045/Z/15/Z (CEB)
Correlation functions quantify super-resolution images and estimate apparent clustering due to over-counting
We present an analytical method to quantify clustering in super-resolution
localization images of static surfaces in two dimensions. The method also
describes how over-counting of labeled molecules contributes to apparent
self-clustering and how the effective lateral resolution of an image can be
determined. This treatment applies to clustering of proteins and lipids in
membranes, where there is significant interest in using super-resolution
localization techniques to probe membrane heterogeneity. When images are
quantified using pair correlation functions, the magnitude of apparent
clustering due to over-counting will vary inversely with the surface density of
labeled molecules and does not depend on the number of times an average
molecule is counted. Over-counting does not yield apparent co-clustering in
double label experiments when pair cross-correlation functions are measured. We
apply our analytical method to quantify the distribution of the IgE receptor
(Fc{\epsilon}RI) on the plasma membranes of chemically fixed RBL-2H3 mast cells
from images acquired using stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM)
and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). We find that apparent clustering of
labeled IgE bound to Fc{\epsilon}RI detected with both methods arises from
over-counting of individual complexes. Thus our results indicate that these
receptors are randomly distributed within the resolution and sensitivity limits
of these experiments.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
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