48 research outputs found

    Role of endocytic trafficking during Dpp gradient formation

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    Morphogens are secreted signalling molecules that are expressed in restricted groups of cells within the developing tissue. From there, they are secreted and travel throughout the target field and form concentration gradients. These concentration profiles endow receiving cells with positional information. A number of experiments in Drosophila demonstrated that the morphogen Decapentaplegic (Dpp) forms activity gradients by inducing the expression of several target genes above distinct concentration thresholds at different distances from the source. This way, Dpp contributes to developmental fates in the target field such as the Drosophila wing disc. Although the tissue distribution as well as the actual shape and size of the Dpp morphogen concentration gradient has been visualized, the cell biological mechanisms through which the morphogen forms and maintains a gradient are still a subject of debate. Two hypotheses as to the dominant mechanism of movement have been proposed that can account for Dpp spreading throughout the Drosophila wing imaginal target tissue: extracellular diffusion and planar transcytosis, i. e. endocytosis and resecretion of the ligand that is thereby transported through the cells. Here, I present data indicating that implications of a theoreticalanalysis of Dpp spreading, where Dpp transport through the target tissue is solely based on extracellular diffusion taking into account receptor binding and subsequent internalization, are inconsistent with experimental results. By performing Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching (FRAP) experiments, I demonstrate a key role of Dynamin-mediated endocytosis for Dpp gradient formation. In addition, I show that most of GFP-Dpp traffics through endocytic compartments at the receiving epithelial cells, probably recycled through apical recycling endosomes (ARE). Finally, a Dpp recycling assay based on subcellular photouncage of ligand is presented to address specifically the Dpp recycling event at the receiving cells

    Second harmonic generating (SHG) nanoprobes: a new tool for biomedical imaging

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    Fluorescence microscopy has profoundly changed how cell and molecular biology is studied in almost every aspect. However, the need of characterizing biological targets is largely unmet due to deficiencies associated with the use of fluorescent agents. Dye bleaching, dye signal saturation, blinking, and tissue autofluorescence can severely limit the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Given the photophysical properties are fundamentally different to the fluorescent agents currently used in biomedical research, second harmonic generating (SHG) nanoprobes can be suitable for biomedical imaging and can eliminate most of the drawbacks encountered in classical fluorescence systems

    Localized multiphoton photoactivation of paGFP in Drosophila wing imaginal discs

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    In biological imaging of fluorescent molecules, multiphoton laser scanning microscopy (MPLSM) has become the favorite method of fluorescence microscopy in tissue explants and living animals. The great power of MPLSM with pulsed lasers in the infrared wavelength lies in its relatively deep optical penetration and reduced ability to cause potential nonspecific phototoxicity. These properties are of crucial importance for long time-lapse imaging. Since the excited area is intrinsically confined to the high-intensity focal volume of the illuminating beam, MPLSM can also be applied as a tool for selectively manipulating fluorophores in a known, three-dimensionally defined volume within the tissue. Here we introduce localized multiphoton photoactivation (MP-PA) as a technique suitable for analyzing the dynamics of photoactivated molecules with three-dimensional spatial resolution of a few micrometers. Short, intense laser light pulses uncage photoactivatable molecules via multiphoton excitation in a defined volume. MP-PA is demonstrated on photoactivatable paGFP in Drosophila wing imaginal discs. This technique is especially useful for extracting quantitative information about the properties of photoactivatable fusion proteins in different cellular locations in living tissue as well as to label single or small patches of cells in tissue to track their subsequent lineage

    Intercellular Bridges in Vertebrate Gastrulation

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    The developing zebrafish embryo has been the subject of many studies of regional patterning, stereotypical cell movements and changes in cell shape. To better study the morphological features of cells during gastrulation, we generated mosaic embryos expressing membrane attached Dendra2 to highlight cellular boundaries. We find that intercellular bridges join a significant fraction of epiblast cells in the zebrafish embryo, reaching several cell diameters in length and spanning across different regions of the developing embryos. These intercellular bridges are distinct from the cellular protrusions previously reported as extending from hypoblast cells (1–2 cellular diameters in length) or epiblast cells (which were shorter). Most of the intercellular bridges were formed at pre-gastrula stages by the daughters of a dividing cell maintaining a membrane tether as they move apart after mitosis. These intercellular bridges persist during gastrulation and can mediate the transfer of proteins between distant cells. These findings reveal a surprising feature of the cellular landscape in zebrafish embryos and open new possibilities for cell-cell communication during gastrulation, with implications for modeling, cellular mechanics, and morphogenetic signaling

    Paramagnetic, Silicon Quantum Dots for Magnetic Resonance and Two-Photon Imaging of Macrophages

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    Quantum dots (QDs) are an attractive platform for building multimodality imaging probes, but the toxicity for typical cadmium QDs limits enthusiasm for their clinical use. Nontoxic, silicon QDs are more promising but tend to require short-wavelength excitations which are subject to tissue scattering and autofluorescence artifacts. Herein, we report the synthesis of paramagnetic, manganese-doped, silicon QDs (Si_(Mn) QDs) and demonstrate that they are detectable by both MRI and near-infrared excited, two-photon imaging. The Si_(Mn) QDs are coated with dextran sulfate to target them to scavenger receptors on macrophages, a biomarker of vulnerable plaques. TEM images show that isolated QDs have an average core diameter of 4.3 ± 1.0 nm and the hydrodynamic diameters of coated nanoparticles range from 8.3 to 43 nm measured by dynamic light scattering (DLS). The Si_(Mn) QDs have an r_1 relaxivity of 25.50 ± 1.44 mM^(−1) s^(−1) and an r_2 relaxivity of 89.01 ± 3.26 mM^(−1) s^(−1 )(37 °C, 1.4 T). They emit strong fluorescence at 441 nm with a quantum yield of 8.1% in water. Cell studies show that the probes specifically accumulate in macrophages by a receptor-mediated process, are nontoxic to mammalian cells, and produce distinct contrast in both T_1-weighted magnetic resonance and single- or two-photon excitation fluorescence images. These QDs have promising diagnostic potential as high macrophage density is associated with atherosclerotic plaques vulnerable to rupture

    Precision of the Dpp gradient

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    Morphogen concentration gradients provide positional information by activating target genes in a concentration-dependent manner. Recent reports show that the gradient of the syncytial morphogen Bicoid seems to provide precise positional information to determine target gene domains. For secreted morphogenetic ligands, the precision of the gradients, the signal transduction and the reliability of target gene expression domains have not been studied. Here we investigate these issues for the TGF-β-type morphogen Dpp. We first studied theoretically how cell-to-cell variability in the source, the target tissue, or both, contribute to the variations of the gradient. Fluctuations in the source and target generate a local maximum of precision at a finite distance to the source. We then determined experimentally in the wing epithelium: (1) the precision of the Dpp concentration gradient; (2) the precision of the Dpp signaling activity profile; and (3) the precision of activation of the Dpp target gene spalt. As captured by our theoretical description, the Dpp gradient provides positional information with a maximal precision a few cells away from the source. This maximal precision corresponds to a positional uncertainly of about a single cell diameter. The precision of the Dpp gradient accounts for the precision of the spalt expression range, implying that Dpp can act as a morphogen to coarsely determine the expression pattern of target genes

    Localized multiphoton photoactivation of paGFP in Drosophila wing imaginal discs

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    In biological imaging of fluorescent molecules, multiphoton laser scanning microscopy (MPLSM) has become the favorite method of fluorescence microscopy in tissue explants and living animals. The great power of MPLSM with pulsed lasers in the infrared wavelength lies in its relatively deep optical penetration and reduced ability to cause potential nonspecific phototoxicity. These properties are of crucial importance for long time-lapse imaging. Since the excited area is intrinsically confined to the high-intensity focal volume of the illuminating beam, MPLSM can also be applied as a tool for selectively manipulating fluorophores in a known, three-dimensionally defined volume within the tissue. Here we introduce localized multiphoton photoactivation (MP-PA) as a technique suitable for analyzing the dynamics of photoactivated molecules with three-dimensional spatial resolution of a few micrometers. Short, intense laser light pulses uncage photoactivatable molecules via multiphoton excitation in a defined volume. MP-PA is demonstrated on photoactivatable paGFP in Drosophila wing imaginal discs. This technique is especially useful for extracting quantitative information about the properties of photoactivatable fusion proteins in different cellular locations in living tissue as well as to label single or small patches of cells in tissue to track their subsequent lineage

    Kinetics of Morphogen Gradient Formation

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    In the developing fly wing, secreted morphogens such as Decapentaplegic (Dpp) and Wingless (Wg) form gradients of concentration providing positional information. Dpp forms a longer-range gradient than Wg. To understand how the range is controlled, we measured the four key kinetic parameters governing morphogen spreading: the production rate, the effective diffusion coefficient, the degradation rate, and the immobile fraction. The four parameters had different values for Dpp versus Wg. In addition, Dynamin-dependent endocytosis was required for spreading of Dpp, but not Wg. Thus, the cellular mechanisms of Dpp and Wingless spreading are different: Dpp spreading requires endocytic, intracellular trafficking
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