4.7 Article

Light-inducible activation of cell cycle progression in Xenopus egg extracts under microfluidic confinement

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 19, Issue 20, Pages 3499-3511

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c9lc00569b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF Faculty CAREER Program [BBBE 1254608]
  2. NIH [R15GM101636, R01GM113028, R01GM101636, P20GM103432]
  3. Laura and Arthur Colwin Endowed Summer Research Fellowship Fund
  4. National Institute of General Medical Sciences at the National Institutes of Health [P20GM104316, P30GM110758]
  5. Burroughs Wellcome Fund
  6. University of Delaware Research Foundation
  7. Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, MA

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Cell-free Xenopus egg extract is a widely used and biochemically tractable model system that allows recapitulation and elucidation of fundamental cellular processes. Recently, the introduction of microfluidic extract manipulation has enabled compartmentalization of bulk extract and a newfound ability to study organelles on length scales that recapitulate key features of cellular morphology. While the microfluidic confinement of extracts has produced a compelling platform for the in vitro study of cell processes at physiologically-relevant length scales, it also imposes experimental limitations by restricting dynamic control over extract properties. Here, we introduce photodegradable polyethylene glycol (PEG) hydrogels as a vehicle to passively and selectively manipulate extract composition through the release of proteins encapsulated within the hydrogel matrix. Photopatterned PEG hydrogels, passive to both extract and encapsulated proteins, serve as protein depots within microfluidic channels, which are subsequently flooded with extract. Illumination by ultraviolet light (UV) degrades the hydrogel structures and releases encapsulated protein. We show that an engineered fluorescent protein with a nuclear localization signal (GST-GFP-NLS) retains its ability to localize within nearby nuclei following UV-induced release from hydrogel structures. When diffusion is considered, the kinetics of nuclear accumulation are similar to those in experiments utilizing conventional, bulk fluid handling. Similarly, the release of recombinant cyclin B Delta 90, a mutant form of the master cell cycle regulator cyclin B which lacks the canonical destruction box, was able to induce the expected cell cycle transition from interphase to mitosis. This transition was confirmed by the observation of nuclear envelope breakdown (NEBD), a phenomenological hallmark of mitosis, and the induction of mitosis-specific biochemical markers. This approach to extract manipulation presents a versatile and customizable route to regulating the spatial and temporal dynamics of cellular events in microfluidically confined cell-free extracts.

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