4.8 Article

Dissection of molecular assembly dynamics by tracking orientation and position of single molecules in live cells

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1607674113

Keywords

single-molecule orientation; live cell imaging; polarized fluorescence; actin; septin

Funding

  1. Human Frontier Science Program Grant [LT000096/2011-C]
  2. Neal Cornell Career Development Award
  3. Marine Biological Laboratory-University of Chicago Collaboration Award
  4. NIH [T32 GM008704, R01 GM114274, R01 GM100160]
  5. National Science Foundation [MCB 1212400]
  6. Whitman Summer Investigator Award
  7. Marine Biological Laboratory start-up funds from the Inoue Family Endowment
  8. Japan Science and Technology Agency Precursory Research for Embryonic Science and Technology (PRESTO) Program
  9. Direct For Biological Sciences
  10. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience [1615138] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Regulation of order, such as orientation and conformation, drives the function of most molecular assemblies in living cells but remains difficult to measure accurately through space and time. We built an instantaneous fluorescence polarization microscope, which simultaneously images position and orientation of fluorophores in living cells with single-molecule sensitivity and a time resolution of 100 ms. We developed image acquisition and analysis methods to track single particles that interact with higher-order assemblies of molecules. We tracked the fluctuations in position and orientation of molecules from the level of an ensemble of fluorophores down to single fluorophores. We tested our system in vitro using fluorescently labeled DNA and F-actin, in which the ensemble orientation of polarized fluorescence is known. We then tracked the orientation of sparsely labeled F-actin network at the leading edge of migrating human keratinocytes, revealing the anisotropic distribution of actin filaments relative to the local retrograde flow of the F-actin network. Additionally, we analyzed the position and orientation of septin-GFP molecules incorporated in septin bundles in growing hyphae of a filamentous fungus. Our data indicate that septin-GFP molecules undergo positional fluctuations within similar to 350 nm of the binding site and angular fluctuations within similar to 30 degrees of the central orientation of the bundle. By reporting position and orientation of molecules while they form dynamic higher-order structures, our approach can provide insights into how micrometer-scale ordered assemblies emerge from nanoscale molecules in living cells.

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