4.5 Article

Spatial Intensity Distribution Analysis Reveals Abnormal Oligomerization of Proteins in Single Cells

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 109, Issue 4, Pages 710-721

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2015.06.068

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Neurophysics Training Program
  2. Fonds Recherche du Quebec - Nature et Technologies
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation [PA00P3-131496]
  5. McGill Program in Neuroengineering
  6. Killam Trust
  7. Chercheur National Award from the Fonds Recherche du Quebec - Sante
  8. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  9. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PA00P3_131496] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Knowledge of membrane receptor organization is essential for understanding the initial steps in cell signaling and trafficking mechanisms, but quantitative analysis of receptor interactions at the single-cell level and in different cellular compartments has remained highly challenging. To achieve this, we apply a quantitative image analysis technique-spatial intensity distribution analysis (SpIDA)-that can measure fluorescent particle concentrations and oligomerization states within different subcellular compartments in live cells. An important technical challenge faced by fluorescence microscopy-based measurement of oligonnerization is the fidelity of receptor labeling. In practice, imperfect labeling biases the distribution of oligomeric states measured within an aggregated system. We extend SpIDA to enable analysis of high-order oligomers from fluorescence microscopy images, by including a probability weighted correction algorithm for nonemitting labels. We demonstrated that this fraction of nonemitting probes could be estimated in single cells using SpIDA measurements on model systems with known oligonnerization state. Previously, this artifact was measured using single-step photobleaching. This approach was validated using computer-simulated data and the imperfect labeling was quantified in cells with ion channels of known oligomer subunit count. It was then applied to quantify the oligomerization states in different cell compartments of the proteolipid protein (PLP) expressed in COS-7 cells. Expression of a mutant PLP linked to impaired trafficking resulted in the detection of PLP tetramers that persist in the endoplasmic reticulum, while no difference was measured at the membrane between the distributions of wild-type and mutated PLPs. Our results demonstrate that SpIDA allows measurement of protein oligomerization in different compartments of intact cells, even when fractional mislabeling occurs as well as photobleaching during the imaging process, and reveals insights into the mechanism underlying impaired trafficking of PLP.

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