| August
5, 2004
Method To Visualize Gene Activity May Provide Important
Insight Into Normal Development And Genome Function
By Sherry Seethaler
A technique developed
by University of California, San Diego biologists, which uses
bright fluorescent dyes to reveal the activity of genes in individual
cells of an organism, promises to be a boon to developmental
biologists, and may provide new insight into how cancerous tumors
begin and grow.
The advance, described
in the August 6 issue of Science, allows researchers,
for the first time, to simultaneously visualize the activity
of multiple genes in the same cell. The combination of genes
that are active in a particular cell during development determines
that cell’s fate—what type of cell it becomes. The
advance also makes it possible to quantify how active a gene
is, and even infer the genetic makeup of an organism.
“In addition
to facilitating our own research on fruit fly development, there
are many potential applications for this technique,” says
Ethan Bier, a professor of biology at UCSD who led the research
team. “For example, it could be used to understand how
tumors arise and grow, by revealing what genes are turned on
and when. With this information, it should be possible for cancer
biologists to predict how aggressive a tumor will be from its
early patterns of gene expression.”
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Activity
of five genes in a Drosophila embryo. Credit: Dave Kosman,
UCSD
High-resolution
versions of these images are available through the journal
Science and AAAS, (202) 326-6440, scipak@aaas.org
|
“Cell fate decisions
must be understood in order for any of the incredible medical
potential of stem cell therapy to be realized,” adds Dave
Kosman, a research scientist in the Bier and McGinnis laboratories
and lead author on the paper
Multiplex labeling,
as the technique is called, uses RNA tagged with a fluorescent
molecule to signal that a gene is turned on. When a gene is
“on” it produces RNA copies—gene transcripts—of
itself. The biologists designed fluorescently-tagged RNA molecules
that are complementary to the gene transcripts, and bind to
them like Velcro. Therefore a fluorescent beacon reveals the
existence and location of the RNA gene copy.
 |
Activity
of seven genes in a Drosophila embryo. Credit: Dave Kosman,
UCSD
High-resolution versions of these images are
available through the journal Science and AAAS,
(202) 326-6440, scipak@aaas.org
|
“Multiplex labeling
has allowed us to directly map the activation patterns of micro-RNA
genes, which were hitherto undetectable,” says William
McGinnis, a professor of biology at UCSD and co-principal investigator
of the study. “Micro-RNAs were known to be important in
development, but this is the first evidence indicating that
these genes can control the embryonic body plan.”
 |
Activity
of three genes in cells of a Drosophila embryo. Credit:
Dave Kosman, UCSD
High-resolution
versions of these images are available through the journal
Science and AAAS, (202) 326-6440, scipak@aaas.org
|
Different colored fluorescent
molecules can be used to identify transcripts from different
genes in the same cell. It works even if one gene is much more
active than another, because the amount of fluorescence of each
color is quantified separately.
“When using the
microscope to measure the fluorescence, the light is fanned
out into a rainbow, and each color is read through a separate
channel,” explains Bier. “That way if the light
is 90 percent blue and ten percent yellow, it might look blue
to the naked eye, but the microscope detects each color present.”
According to Bier,
multiplex labeling fills a gap in developmental biologists’
toolkit between gene chips, which can identify several hundred
gene transcripts at a time, but not their location, and methods
that can reveal the identity and location of up to three gene
transcripts simultaneously—though not if they are in the
same cell. So far the researchers have used multiplex labeling
to visualize the activity of up to seven genes at the same time,
but they predict it will be possible to increase this to 50.
Newly developed, ultra-bright
fluorescent molecules make the multiplex labeling technique
possible. The fluorescent molecules were provided by Molecular
Probes, Inc., and the company’s scientists also shared
their expertise with the UCSD researchers. Developing an effective
way to attach the fluorescent molecule to the RNAs complementary
to the gene transcripts, and perfecting the overall labeling
process were also pivotal in the development of the technique.
“Up until now
visualizing gene transcripts has been more art than science,”
says Kosman. “There was a lot of trial and error involved.
We have developed a reliable technique that is powerful enough
to generate a molecular fingerprint of the gene activity in
a single cell.”
Bier contrasted the
level of detail revealed with multiplex labeling and previous
techniques for visualizing gene activity as being akin to “the
difference between looking at the stars through a telescope
versus binoculars.” The researchers point out that while
they have refined the technique in Drosophila embryos,
it will likely require modifications to work in other organisms.
A detailed guide to the labeling process accompanying the paper,
and available through Science’s website, should
facilitate the necessary adaptations.
Other UCSD contributors
to the paper were Claudia M. Mizutani and Derek Lemons and W.
Gregory Cox was a contributor from Molecular Probes, Inc. This
research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation
and the National Institutes of Health.
Media Contact: Sherry
Seethaler (858) 534-4656
Comment: Ethan Bier (858)
534-8792
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