We present a method for the generation of in vitro self-sustained mitotic oscillations at the single-cell level by encapsulating egg extracts of Xenopus laevis in water-in-oil microemulsions.
Real-time measurement of oscillations at the single-cell level is important to uncover the mechanisms of biological clocks. Although bulk extracts prepared from Xenopus laevis eggs have been powerful in dissecting biochemical networks underlying the cell-cycle progression, their ensemble average measurement typically leads to a damped oscillation, despite each individual oscillator being sustained. This is due to the difficulty of perfect synchronization among individual oscillators in noisy biological systems. To retrieve the single-cell dynamics of the oscillator, we developed a droplet-based artificial cell system that can reconstitute mitotic cycles in cell-like compartments encapsulating cycling cytoplasmic extracts of Xenopus laevis eggs. These simple cytoplasmic-only cells exhibit sustained oscillations for over 30 cycles. To build more complicated cells with nuclei, we added demembranated sperm chromatin to trigger nuclei self-assembly in the system. We observed a periodic progression of chromosome condensation/decondensation and nuclei envelop breakdown/reformation, like in real cells. This indicates that the mitotic oscillator functions faithfully to drive multiple downstream mitotic events. We simultaneously tracked the dynamics of the mitotic oscillator and downstream processes in individual droplets using multi-channel time-lapse fluorescence microscopy. The artificial cell-cycle system provides a high-throughput framework for quantitative manipulation and analysis of mitotic oscillations with single-cell resolution, which likely provides important insights into the regulatory machinery and functions of the clock.
Cytoplasmic extracts prepared from Xenopus laevis eggs represent one of the most predominant models for the biochemical study of cell cycles, given the large volume of oocytes, the rapid cell cycle progression, and the capability of reconstituting mitotic events in vitro1,2. This system has allowed the initial discovery and mechanistic characterization of essential cell-cycle regulators like maturation-promoting factor (MPF) as well as downstream mitotic processes including spindle assembly and chromosome segregation1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11. The Xenopus egg extracts have also been used for detailed dissection of the regulatory networks of the cell cycle clock8,12,13,14 and for studies of the DNA damage/replication checkpoint15 and the mitotic spindle assembly checkpoint16,17,18.
These studies of cell cycles using the Xenopus egg extracts have mainly been based on bulk measurements. However, conventional bulk reaction assays may not mimic real cell behaviors, given a major discrepancy in their dimensions and subcellular spatial compartmentalization of reaction molecules. Moreover, bulk measurements of mitotic activities are prone to giving a limited number of cycles before quickly damping8. These disadvantages of bulk reactions have prevented the extract system to provide further understanding of complex clock dynamic properties and functions. Recent studies have encapsulated cell-free cytostatic factor-arrested (CSF) Xenopus extracts19,20 into size-defined cell-like compartments, which have helped elucidate how spindle size is modulated by the cytoplasmic volume. However, this in vitro system is arrested at metaphase of meiosis II by the action of cytostatic factor1, and a system capable of long-term sustained oscillations at the single-cell level is needed for further investigation of the cell cycle oscillator.
To study cell cycle oscillations with single-cell resolution, we have developed a cell-scale, high-throughput system for reconstitution and simultaneous measurement of multiple self-sustained mitotic oscillatory processes in individual microemulsion droplets. In this detailed video protocol, we demonstrate the creation of the artificial mitotic oscillation system by encapsulating cycling Xenopus laevis egg cytoplasm in microemulsions of sizes ranging from 10 to 300 µm. In this system, mitotic oscillations including chromosome condensation and de-condensation, nuclear envelope breakdown and reformation, and the degradation and synthesis of anaphase substrates (e.g., securin-mCherry in this protocol) were successfully reconstituted.
All methods described here have been approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of University of Michigan.
1. Preparation of Materials for Cell Cycle Reconstitution and Detection
2. Preparation of Cycling Xenopus Extracts
NOTE: The overall procedure of preparing the extracts is illustrated in Figure 1A. Adapted from Murray 19911.
3. Droplet Generation
4. Image Processing and Data Analysis
In Figure 2, we show that this protocol produces mitotic oscillations in both simple, nuclear-free cells as well as complicated cells with nuclei, where the oscillator drives the cyclic alternation of nuclei formation and deformation. The nuclei-free droplets generate mitotic oscillations up to 30 undamped cycles over the time span of 92 hours, as indicated by the periodic synthesis and degradation of a fluorescence reporter securin-mCherry (Figure 2A). Securin is a substrate of the anaphase promoting complex APC/C. The degradation of securin-mCherry during anaphase thus indicates the activity of APC/C.
To examine the ability of the mitotic oscillator to drive downstream mitotic events, we additionally supplied demembranated sperm chromatin, purified green fluorescent protein-nuclear localization signal (GFP-NLS), and Hoechst 33342 dyes to the cytoplasmic extracts. Figure 2B shows the autonomous alternation of distinct cell-cycle phases, interphase (blue bars) and mitosis (red bars), during which the changes of nuclear morphology are driven by the self-sustained mitotic oscillator. All mitotic events, i.e., the chromosome decondensation and condensation reported by Hoechst 33342 (Figure 2B, first row), the nuclear formation and nuclear envelope breakdown by GFP-NLS (Figure 2B, second row), and the activity of the cell-cycle oscillator by the synthesis and degradation of securin-mCherry (Figure 2B, third row), coincided with each other. Images were collected using time-lapse multi-channel fluorescence microscope. Our experimental results demonstrate that the reconstructed cell-cycle system is capable of reconstructing a mitotic oscillator of Cdk1 and APC/C, which can drive a series of downstream events including nuclear envelope breakdown and reformation, and chromosome morphology change.
Figure 3 shows the oscillations indicated by the mean fluorescence intensity of securin-mCherry before and after noise removal. Peaks and troughs became more pronounced after removing the background noise, especially for the first two oscillations, indicating that noise removal can help improve signal to noise for further analysis.
Figure 1. Experimental procedure for generating droplet-based mitotic cells. A. Cytoplasmic extracts are collected through ultra-centrifugation. B. The extracts are supplied with multiple components for the purpose of reconstituting and reporting mitotic oscillations. Using a vortexing method, the extracts and surfactant oil are mixed to generate droplets. C. Droplets are loaded into a trichloro(1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluorooctyl)silane-coated tube and then imaged through an epi-fluorescence microscope. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. The detection of cell cycle dynamics using fluorescent reporters. A. The time course of the mean securin-mCherry fluorescence intensity of the selected droplet, indicating 30 undamped oscillations over a course of 92 hours. The insert figure shows the fluorescence image with the selected droplet framed by white dotted circle. The scale bar is 100 µm. B. Time series of snapshots of a droplet in fluorescence channels (top three rows) and bright field (the last row). The cyclic progression of the cell cycle clock and its downstream mitotic processes are simultaneously tracked by multiple fluorescent reporters. The anaphase substrate securin-mCherry indicates activity of the clock regulator APC/C, the Hoescht stain indicates chromosomal morphology changes, and the GFP-NLS indicates nuclear envelope breakdowns and reformations. Nuclear envelopes (highlighted by white arrows) are also detectable in the bright field images, matching the localization of GFP-NLS indicated nuclei. The scale bar is 50 µm. Interphase and mitotic phase are respectively denoted by the blue bars and red bars above the images. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Background subtraction for the mean fluorescence intensity of securin-mCherry. A. The oscillation time course before background noise removal. B. The oscillation time course after noise removal. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
We have presented a novel method for developing a high-throughput artificial cell system that enables in vitro reconstitution and long-term tracking of self-sustained cell-cycle oscillations at the single-cell level. There are several critical steps that make this method successful. First, freshly squeezed Xenopus eggs with a good quality, compared with laid eggs, tend to produce extracts with longer-lasting oscillation activity. Second, encapsulation of extracts within the surfactant-stabilized microenvironments is crucial to preserve the oscillation activity. Third, incubation of the oil droplets into a thin tube confines the droplets within a single layer, making it easier for image processing and long-term tracking. Fourth, coating the tube inner wall with trichloro(1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluorooctyl)silane as an anti-adhesive to lower the surface energy helps preserve the extract activity. Fifth, sealing the tubes with oil would prevent droplet flow. The oil-sealing method can also prevent evaporation and further preserve the extract activity. These together improve the success rate of in vitro reconstruction of robust oscillations in droplets and the accuracy of segmentation and tracking of these droplets in a long-term.
To generate microemulsion droplets, we have employed both a simple vortexing method, similar to a few other studies29,30,31, as well as the more commonly used microfluidics techniques19,20 (data not shown). Both methods were able to successfully generate microemulsions in a high-throughput manner. One limitation associated with the vortexing method is that the droplet size is not uniformly controlled. For studies that require a well-defined size with minimized size variation, microfluidics techniques should be used for better control of droplet sizes. Here, we have chosen the vortexing method over the microfluidic method for two reasons. First, it has simple and easy-to-follow procedures, which would allow labs without access to microfluidic techniques or nanofabrication facilities to adapt this method easily. Second, the vortexing method is more efficient and economic for investigating size-dependent behaviors of the oscillator. It can generate a wide distribution of droplet sizes with radii varying from several micrometers up to 300 micrometers, while the microfluidic technique can only generate a narrow distribution centered on a predefined size. The range of droplet sizes generated with this method matches the wide range of cell sizes resulting from the characteristic reductive cell divisions in the cleavage stage of early embryos such as Xenopus and zebrafish.
The present method has significantly improved the sustainability of oscillations and the throughput of analyzing complex clock dynamics, compared with existing methods of reconstituting biological oscillators in well-mixed bulk solution8,32, which tend to produce quickly damped oscillations. We have shown that this method has significantly improved the lifespan of oscillations from a few cycles in bulk reaction8 to over 30 cycles in the microenvironment of droplets (Figure 2A). Additionally, bulk reactions lack the similarity to the actual cell dimensions and cannot recapitulate the spatial organization achieved by functional compartmentalization in real cells. Having overcome these limitations of bulk reactions, our artificial cell system provides an essential platform for investigating challenging questions such as the cellular heterogeneity and the stochasticity of oscillators, which are otherwise impossible to explore.
Moreover, this method provides flexibility in the degree of complexity to which cells can be built. To avoid any interference from the complicated nuclear dynamics, we can reconstitute a minimal, cytoplasmic-only cell-cycle system that contains no nuclei. This simple and cytoplasmic-only oscillator exhibits self-sustained oscillations significantly better than some existing synthetic oscillators. By supplying sperm chromatin, we can also reconstitute more complex cells with nuclei that alternate between self-assembly at interphase and nuclear deformation at the mitotic phase in a rhythmic manner. The activity of the mitotic oscillator as well as the downstream nuclear events can be simultaneous measured by multi-channel fluorescence imaging and single-cell tracking.
The method also enables a high degree of manipulation in droplet size and cell-cycle speed. The vortexing technique allows for generation of droplets with radii in a wide range, which will benefit the study of cell-size dependent behaviors of cell cycles. In addition, the cell-cycle speed can be modulated by supplying different concentrations of cyclin B1 mRNAs33, which would allow us to study the tunability function of the cell-cycle clock.
With these advantages, the in vitro reconstructed cell-cycle platform, enabling visualization, manipulation, and analysis of single-cell dynamics, will likely pave the way for new insights into the more complicated stochastic behaviors of the cell cycle clock. The method may also be generalizable to the in vitro studies of other oscillators that traditionally rely on bulk reactions.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank Madeleine Lu for constructing securin-mCherry plasmid, Lap Man Lee, Kenneth Ho and Allen P Liu for discussions about droplet generation, Jeremy B. Chang and James E. Ferrell Jr for providing GFP-NLS construct. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (Early CAREER Grant #1553031), the National Institutes of Health (MIRA #GM119688), and a Sloan Research Fellowship.
Xenopus laevis frogs | Xenopus-I Inc. | ||
QIAprep spin miniprep kit | QIAGEN | 27104 | |
QIAquick PCR Purification Kit (250) | QIAGEN | 28106 | |
mMESSAGE mMACHINE SP6 Transcription Kit | Ambion | AM1340 | |
BL21 (DE3)-T-1 competent cell | Sigma-Aldrich | B2935 | |
Calcium ionophore | Sigma-Aldrich | A23187 | |
Hoechst 33342 | Sigma-Aldrich | B2261 | Toxic |
Trichloro | Sigma-Aldrich | 448931 | Toxic |
(1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluorooctyl) silane | |||
PFPE-PEG surfactant | Ran Biotechnologies | 008-FluoroSurfactant-2wtH-50G | |
GE Healthcare Glutathione Sepharose 4B beads | Sigma-Aldrich | GE17-0756-01 | |
PD-10 column | Sigma-Aldrich | GE17-0851-01 | |
VitroCom miniature hollow glass tubing | VitroCom | 5012 | |
Olympus SZ61 Stereo Microscope | Olympus | ||
Olympus IX83 microscope | Olympus | ||
Olympus FV1200 confocal microscope | Olympus | ||
NanoDrop spectrophotometer | Thermofisher | ND-2000 | |
0.4 mL Snap-Cap Microtubes | E&K Scientific | 485050-B | |
PureLink RNA Mini Kit | ThermoFisher(Ambion) | 12183018A | |
Fisherbrand Analog Vortex Mixer | Fisher Scientific | 2215365 | |
Imaris | Bitplane | Version 7.3 | Image analysis software |