scholarly journals Genetically encoded cell-death indicators (GEDI) to detect an early irreversible commitment to neurodegeneration

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy W. Linsley ◽  
Kevan Shah ◽  
Nicholas Castello ◽  
Michelle Chan ◽  
Dominic Haddad ◽  
...  

AbstractCell death is a critical process that occurs normally in health and disease. However, its study is limited due to available technologies that only detect very late stages in the process or specific death mechanisms. Here, we report the development of a new fluorescent biosensor called genetically encoded death indicator (GEDI). GEDI specifically detects an intracellular Ca2+ level that cells achieve early in the cell death process and marks a stage at which cells are irreversibly committed to die. The time-resolved nature of GEDI delineates a binary demarcation of cell life and death in real time, reformulating the definition of cell death. We demonstrate that GEDI acutely and accurately reports death of rodent and human neurons in vitro, and show GEDI enables a novel automated imaging platform for single cell detection of neuronal death in vivo in zebrafish larvae. With a quantitative pseudo-ratiometric signal, GEDI facilitates high-throughput analysis of cell death in time lapse imaging analysis, providing the necessary resolution and scale to identify early factors leading to cell death in studies of neurodegeneration.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy W. Linsley ◽  
Kevan Shah ◽  
Nicholas Castello ◽  
Michelle Chan ◽  
Dominik Haddad ◽  
...  

AbstractCell death is a critical process that occurs normally in health and disease. However, its study is limited due to available technologies that only detect very late stages in the process or specific death mechanisms. Here, we report the development of a family of fluorescent biosensors called genetically encoded death indicators (GEDIs). GEDIs specifically detect an intracellular Ca2+ level that cells achieve early in the cell death process and that marks a stage at which cells are irreversibly committed to die. The time-resolved nature of a GEDI delineates a binary demarcation of cell life and death in real time, reformulating the definition of cell death. We demonstrate that GEDIs acutely and accurately report death of rodent and human neurons in vitro, and show that GEDIs enable an automated imaging platform for single cell detection of neuronal death in vivo in zebrafish larvae. With a quantitative pseudo-ratiometric signal, GEDIs facilitate high-throughput analysis of cell death in time-lapse imaging analysis, providing the necessary resolution and scale to identify early factors leading to cell death in studies of neurodegeneration.



2001 ◽  
Vol 75 (15) ◽  
pp. 7114-7121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer L. Nargi-Aizenman ◽  
Diane E. Griffin

ABSTRACT Virus infection of neurons leads to different outcomes ranging from latent and noncytolytic infection to cell death. Viruses kill neurons directly by inducing either apoptosis or necrosis or indirectly as a result of the host immune response. Sindbis virus (SV) is an alphavirus that induces apoptotic cell death both in vitro and in vivo. However, apoptotic changes are not always evident in neurons induced to die by alphavirus infection. Time lapse imaging revealed that SV-infected primary cortical neurons exhibited both apoptotic and necrotic morphological features and that uninfected neurons in the cultures also died. Antagonists of the N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) subtype of glutamate receptors protected neurons from SV-induced death without affecting virus replication or SV-induced apoptotic cell death. These results provide evidence that SV infection activates neurotoxic pathways that result in aberrant NMDA receptor stimulation and damage to infected and uninfected neurons.



2003 ◽  
Vol 160 (7) ◽  
pp. 1105-1114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Pierre Levraud ◽  
Myriam Adam ◽  
Marie-Françoise Luciani ◽  
Chantal de Chastellier ◽  
Richard L. Blanton ◽  
...  

Cell death in the stalk of Dictyostelium discoideum, a prototypic vacuolar cell death, can be studied in vitro using cells differentiating as a monolayer. To identify early events, we examined potentially dying cells at a time when the classical signs of Dictyostelium cell death, such as heavy vacuolization and membrane lesions, were not yet apparent. We observed that most cells proceeded through a stereotyped series of differentiation stages, including the emergence of “paddle” cells showing high motility and strikingly marked subcellular compartmentalization with actin segregation. Paddle cell emergence and subsequent demise with paddle-to-round cell transition may be critical to the cell death process, as they were contemporary with irreversibility assessed through time-lapse videos and clonogenicity tests. Paddle cell demise was not related to formation of the cellulose shell because cells where the cellulose-synthase gene had been inactivated underwent death indistinguishable from that of parental cells. A major subcellular alteration at the paddle-to-round cell transition was the disappearance of F-actin. The Dictyostelium vacuolar cell death pathway thus does not require cellulose synthesis and includes early actin rearrangements (F-actin segregation, then depolymerization), contemporary with irreversibility, corresponding to the emergence and demise of highly polarized paddle cells.



2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (17) ◽  
pp. e2020722118
Author(s):  
Takeshi Matsui ◽  
Nanako Kadono-Maekubo ◽  
Yoshiro Suzuki ◽  
Yuki Furuichi ◽  
Keiichiro Shiraga ◽  
...  

The stratum corneum (SC), the outermost epidermal layer, consists of nonviable anuclear keratinocytes, called corneocytes, which function as a protective barrier. The exact modes of cell death executed by keratinocytes of the upper stratum granulosum (SG1 cells) remain largely unknown. Here, using intravital imaging combined with intracellular Ca2+- and pH-responsive fluorescent probes, we aimed to dissect the SG1 death process in vivo. We found that SG1 cell death was preceded by prolonged (∼60 min) Ca2+ elevation and rapid induction of intracellular acidification. Once such intracellular ionic changes were initiated, they became sustained, irreversibly committing the SG1 cells to corneocyte conversion. Time-lapse imaging of isolated murine SG1 cells revealed that intracellular acidification was essential for the degradation of keratohyalin granules and nuclear DNA, phenomena specific to SC corneocyte formation. Furthermore, intravital imaging showed that the number of SG1 cells exhibiting Ca2+ elevation and the timing of intracellular acidification were both tightly regulated by the transient receptor potential cation channel V3. The functional activity of this protein was confirmed in isolated SG1 cells using whole-cell patch-clamp analysis. These findings provide a theoretical framework for improved understanding of the unique molecular mechanisms underlying keratinocyte-specific death mode, namely corneoptosis.



Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 691-691
Author(s):  
Emilia Mahoney ◽  
Amy J. Johnson ◽  
Amy J. Wagner ◽  
Joshua Hessler ◽  
Sneha V. Gupta ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 691 Autophagy is an active process of intracellular degradation that occurs via sequestration of intracytoplasmic components (proteins, organelles) inside double membrane vesicles termed “autophagosomes”, followed by enzymatic degradation upon fusion with lysosomes. Autophagy is an adaptive process induced by cellular starvation but also contributes to development, aging, and pathogenesis of infections, neurodegenerative disease, atherosclerosis and cancer. In cancer, autophagy can function either as a cell survival signal or death response (i.e. type II cell death). To date, autophagy has not been characterized in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The aim of our study is to investigate the presence and the role of autophagy in CLL and the potential contribution it may have to cell death or drug resistance with common therapeutics used in CLL. Our initial studies demonstrated that the essential cellular machinery for autophagy was present. CLL cells have a basal low level of autophagy when cultured in standard media that is actively promoted by cellular starvation or treatment with rapamycin. Given the potential contribution of autophagy in the death process or mechanism of drug resistance, we examined the influence of different therapeutics currently approved for CLL including chlorambucil, fludarabine, rituximab and dexamethasone. Cells were exposed to the drugs for four hours and examined by immunofluorescent staining of endogenous LC3 protein, an established marker of autophagy that becomes conjugated with phosphatydylethanolamine and recruited to the autophagosome membrane. Similar to rapamycin, fludarabine promotes autophagosome accumulation in all CLL samples tested, whereas dexamethasone caused this effect only in a subset. In contrast, no autophagosome accumulation was observed with chlorambucil or rituximab plus cross-linking.To determine the influence of this autophagic response on CLL cell survival, we next examined if chloroquine, which inhibits autophagy via preventing fusion of autophagosomes with lysosomes, affected fludarabine-mediated cell death at concentrations attainable in patients. Although chloroquine inhibited autophagy under these conditions as noted by confocal microscopy showing lack of co-localization between LC3 (autophagosome marker) and LAMP-2 (lysosome marker), it had no effect on fludarabine-mediated cell death. Subsequent studies showed that investigational agents including inhibitors of PI3-kinase, HSP-90, and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK) each induced autophagy, while inhibitors of histone deacetylases (HDACs) did not. Notably, chloroquine enhanced cytotoxicity mediated by the CDK inhibitor flavopiridol in all patient samples examined, while it produced no effect on the cytotoxicity of the remaining agents. This sensitization to flavopiridol was most striking in CLL samples with the greatest viability after four hours of in vitro treatment with flavopiridol, as assessed by annexin/PI flow cytometry. Given that endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress induces autophagy in normal cells, we examined this pathway in flavopiridol-treated CLL patient cells. These studies demonstrated that in a subset of samples, flavopiridol, but not fludarabine, promotes early intracellular ER-derived calcium flux, concomitant with the appearance of ER stress evidenced by quantitative real-time PCR showing increased gene expression of specific markers (XBP1, IRE1, Grp78) and standard PCR showing XBP1 splicing. To determine if this finding was relevant to the in vivo setting, we subsequently examined samples obtained serially from CLL patients during treatment with flavopiridol as part of two completed clinical trials at our institution. Similar to our in vitro studies, we found that flavopiridol actively induces autophagy in vivo through an ER stress-directed pathway. Collectively, our data demonstrate that autophagy is relevant to CLL biology and may serve as a pharmacodynamic marker of targeted therapy in CLL. Furthermore, induction of autophagy appears to contribute to flavopiridol resistance in CLL, whereas its role with other therapeutics is unclear. This work is supported by the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, the D. Warren Brown Foundation, and the National Cancer Institute (CLL Research Consortium and OSU Leukemia SPORE). Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.



2007 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 306-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa M. Bernas ◽  
Paula J. Foster ◽  
Brian K. Rutt

Object An understanding of single glioma cell invasion has been limited by the static picture provided by histological studies. The ability to nondestructively assess cell invasion dynamically in a full 3D volume would improve the quality and quantity of information available from both in vivo and in vitro experiments. The purpose of this study was to observe glioma cell invasion in a 3D in vitro model using a microimaging protocol at 1.5 tesla and to assess the uptake of micron-sized particles of iron oxide (MPIO) and the consequent effects on cell function. Methods Rat C6 glioma cells were labeled with MPIO to a sufficient extent to allow single cell detection in vitro without significant effects on cell proliferation or plating efficiency. When placed on agar-coated plates, the cells formed stable multicellular tumor spheroids (MCTSs), which were embedded in collagen type I gel and serially visualized using magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and phase-contrast microscopy over 8 days. The MCTSs initially appeared as large susceptibility artifacts on MR images, but within 2 days, as cells moved away from the main MCTS, small discrete areas of signal loss, possibly due to single cells, could be observed and tracked. Conclusions Glioma cell invasion can be nondestructively observed using MR imaging. The sensitivity of MR imaging, along with its ability to represent full 3D volumes noninvasively over time, makes it ideal for longitudinal in vivo cell tracking studies.



Author(s):  
Raul I. Garcia ◽  
Evelyn A. Flynn ◽  
George Szabo

Skin pigmentation in mammals involves the interaction of epidermal melanocytes and keratinocytes in the structural and functional unit known as the Epidermal Melanin Unit. Melanocytes(M) synthesize melanin within specialized membrane-bound organelles, the melanosome or pigment granule. These are subsequently transferred by way of M dendrites to keratinocytes(K) by a mechanism still to be clearly defined. Three different, though not necessarily mutually exclusive, mechanisms of melanosome transfer have been proposed: cytophagocytosis by K of M dendrite tips containing melanosomes, direct injection of melanosomes into the K cytoplasm through a cell-to-cell pore or communicating channel formed by localized fusion of M and K cell membranes, release of melanosomes into the extracellular space(ECS) by exocytosis followed by K uptake using conventional phagocytosis. Variability in methods of transfer has been noted both in vivo and in vitro and there is evidence in support of each transfer mechanism. We Have previously studied M-K interactions in vitro using time-lapse cinemicrography and in vivo at the ultrastructural level using lanthanum tracer and freeze-fracture.



Author(s):  
Hongli Zhou ◽  
Minyu Zhou ◽  
Yue Hu ◽  
Yanin Limpanon ◽  
Yubin Ma ◽  
...  

AbstractAngiostrongylus cantonensis (AC) can cause severe eosinophilic meningitis or encephalitis in non-permissive hosts accompanied by apoptosis and necroptosis of brain cells. However, the explicit underlying molecular basis of apoptosis and necroptosis upon AC infection has not yet been elucidated. To determine the specific pathways of apoptosis and necroptosis upon AC infection, gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) and protein–protein interaction (PPI) analysis for gene expression microarray (accession number: GSE159486) of mouse brain infected by AC revealed that TNF-α likely played a central role in the apoptosis and necroptosis in the context of AC infection, which was further confirmed via an in vivo rescue assay after treating with TNF-α inhibitor. The signalling axes involved in apoptosis and necroptosis were investigated via immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting. Immunofluorescence was used to identify the specific cells that underwent apoptosis or necroptosis. The results showed that TNF-α induced apoptosis of astrocytes through the RIP1/FADD/Caspase-8 axis and induced necroptosis of neurons by the RIP3/MLKL signalling pathway. In addition, in vitro assay revealed that TNF-α secretion by microglia increased upon LSA stimulation and caused necroptosis of neurons. The present study provided the first evidence that TNF-α was secreted by microglia stimulated by AC infection, which caused cell death via parallel pathways of astrocyte apoptosis (mediated by the RIP1/FADD/caspase-8 axis) and neuron necroptosis (driven by the RIP3/MLKL complex). Our research comprehensively elucidated the mechanism of cell death after AC infection and provided new insight into targeting TNF-α signalling as a therapeutic strategy for CNS injury.



Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 1446
Author(s):  
Tingting Jin ◽  
Jun Lin ◽  
Yingchao Gong ◽  
Xukun Bi ◽  
Shasha Hu ◽  
...  

Both calcium-independent phospholipase A2 beta (iPLA2β) and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress regulate important pathophysiological processes including inflammation, calcium homeostasis and apoptosis. However, their roles in ischemic heart disease are poorly understood. Here, we show that the expression of iPLA2β is increased during myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury, concomitant with the induction of ER stress and the upregulation of cell death. We further show that the levels of iPLA2β in serum collected from acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients and in samples collected from both in vivo and in vitro I/R injury models are significantly elevated. Further, iPLA2β knockout mice and siRNA mediated iPLA2β knockdown are employed to evaluate the ER stress and cell apoptosis during I/R injury. Additionally, cell surface protein biotinylation and immunofluorescence assays are used to trace and locate iPLA2β. Our data demonstrate the increase of iPLA2β augments ER stress and enhances cardiomyocyte apoptosis during I/R injury in vitro and in vivo. Inhibition of iPLA2β ameliorates ER stress and decreases cell death. Mechanistically, iPLA2β promotes ER stress and apoptosis by translocating to ER upon myocardial I/R injury. Together, our study suggests iPLA2β contributes to ER stress-induced apoptosis during myocardial I/R injury, which may serve as a potential therapeutic target against ischemic heart disease.



2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lan Jin ◽  
Yunhe Chen ◽  
Dan Cheng ◽  
Zhikai He ◽  
Xinyi Shi ◽  
...  

AbstractColorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most aggressive and lethal cancers. The role of autophagy in the pathobiology of CRC is intricate, with opposing functions manifested in different cellular contexts. The Yes-associated protein (YAP), a transcriptional coactivator inactivated by the Hippo tumor-suppressor pathway, functions as an oncoprotein in a variety of cancers. In this study, we found that YAP could negatively regulate autophagy in CRC cells, and consequently, promote tumor progression of CRC in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, YAP interacts with TEAD forming a complex to upregulate the transcription of the apoptosis-inhibitory protein Bcl-2, which may subsequently facilitate cell survival by suppressing autophagy-related cell death; silencing Bcl-2 expression could alleviate YAP-induced autophagy inhibition without affecting YAP expression. Collectively, our data provide evidence for YAP/Bcl-2 as a potential therapeutic target for drug exploration against CRC.



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