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April
20, 2005
Human Cells Filmed Instantly Messaging For First Time
By Rex Graham
Researchers at
UCSD and UC Irvine have captured on video for the first time
chemical signals that traverse human cells in response to tiny
mechanical jabs, like waves spreading from pebbles tossed into
a pond. The scientists released the videos and technical details
that explain how the visualization effect was created as part
of a paper published in the April 21 issue of Nature.
The researchers working
at the UCSD Jacobs School of Engineering’s Department
of Bioengineering developed a novel molecular “reporter”
system, which allowed the dynamic visualization of the activation
of an important protein called Src. Peter Yingxiao Wang, lead
author of the paper and a post-doctoral researcher in UCSD’s
Jacobs School of Engineering spent two years designing the reporter
molecules to light up selectively only when Src was activated,
and not other proteins.
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| Cells
are known to respond to mechanical stimuli, and for the
first time, a mechanically induced biochemical signal was
capture on film by a team of researchers, including Michael
W. Berns (left), Shu Chien, Elliot L. Botvinick, and Peter
Yingxiao Wang. |
Wang and his co-workers
first demonstrated that the novel system was effective in visualizing
Src activation in response to a known chemical stimulant, epidermal
growth factor. Next, they studied the effect of mechanical stimuli
on Src activation. Using technology developed at the Beckman
Laser Institute at UC Irvine by its founding director Michael
Berns, Wang and Elliott Botvinick, a postdoctoral researcher
at UCSD Department of Bioengineering and the Beckman Laser Institute
at UC Irvine, attached small, sticky beads to cells and gently
tugged the beads to and fro with laser power acting as invisible
“tweezers.” As the laser tweezers moved the beads
in one direction, a video camera attached to a specially equipped
microscope recorded the dynamic movement of biochemical signals
in the opposite direction in the form of a signature pattern
of fluorescent light. The fine spatial and temporal resolution
was made possible by a technology called fluorescence resonance
energy transfer.
“We had no idea
what to expect,” said Wang. ”The first time we saw
these incredible waves spreading across the cells I just said
‘Whoa, this is amazing.’ We expected to see a signal
where the tweezers were pulling the beads, but we did not envision
such a directional wave propagating away from the beads.”
Wang worked on this project under the joint advisorship of Shu
Chien, a professor of bioengineering and medicine and director
of the Whitaker Institute of Biomedical Engineering at UCSD,
and Roger Y. Tsien, professor of pharmacology, chemistry, and
biochemistry and investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute at UCSD.
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| Cells
tugged in one direction sent a biochemical signal in the
opposite direction in the form of a signature pattern of
fluorescent light. |
Src is one of a large
group of enzymes called kinases that attach a phosphate molecule
to one or more target proteins in the cell. This phosphorylation
reaction typically switches the target protein from inactive
to active status. Many diseases can result either when a kinase
gene is mutated and can’t properly phosphorylate its targets,
or when a normal kinase becomes overactive or not sufficiently
active. Indeed, Src has been shown to play a key role in cell
growth and development, and in the genesis of cancer, atherosclerosis,
and many other disease conditions.
“This study amounts
to a proof of principle that if we can visualize the activation
of one kinase, we can do the same for many others using the
same approach,” said Chien, the senior author of the paper.
Not only are those additional studies expected to reveal temporal
and spatial patterns of kinase activation, but Chien also predicted
that there will be practical spin offs.
For example, cells
usually tightly control the activity of Src, but in certain
cancers its activity is abnormality high. “We think that
our ability to measure Src activity with this new visualization
technique would be useful as a diagnostic test for many cancers,”
said Chien. The William J. von Liebig Center for Entrepreneurism
and Technology Advancement at UCSD’s Jacobs School has
provided Chien and Wang with funding to commercialize the new
visualization technology as a cancer-detection tool.
The researchers showed
that actin filaments and microtubules, structural elements that
traverse cells like the ribs of an umbrella, could function
as conduits for the spread of biochemical signals. Indeed, when
Wang disrupted either actin filaments or microtubules in his
test cells, the activation signal no longer spread across the
cell. These results suggest that the activation of Src traverses
these filamentous structures.
In addition to Chien,
Wang, Tsien, Berns, and Botvinick, the other authors of the
paper are Yihua Zhao and Shunichi Usami of the UCSD Department
of Bioengineering. The research was supported by grants from
the National Institutes of Health, the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the
Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation, the Alliance for Cellular
Signaling, and the Whitaker Foundation.
Media contact: Rex
Graham, (858) 822-3075
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