TY - JOUR
T1 - Cell Labeling with Magneto-Endosymbionts and the Dissection of the Subcellular Location, Fate, and Host Cell Interactions
AU - Lee, Kayla R.
AU - Wakeel, Abdul
AU - Chakraborty, Papia
AU - Foote, Chandler S.
AU - Kajiura, Lauren
AU - Barrozo, Joyce C.
AU - Chan, Andrea C.
AU - Bazarov, Alexey V.
AU - Spitler, Ryan
AU - Kutny, Peter M.
AU - Denegre, Jim M.
AU - Taft, Rob A.
AU - Seemann, Joachim
AU - Rice, Bradley W.
AU - Contag, Christopher H.
AU - Rutt, Brian K.
AU - Bell, Caleb B.
N1 - Funding Information:
The data reported in this manuscript was supported in part by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under award numbers 1R43EB019239-01 and 1R43TR001202-01. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the funding sources.
Funding Information:
A special thank you to?Rehan Ali for video production of the embryo data. Also to the laboratory of Professor Dan Portnoy for their supply of 6xHis-LLO and BMDM cells and also to the laboratory of Professor Ted Graves for providing 4T1 cells, to UC Berkeley?s Electron Microscope Lab for use of their TEM facility and the biological imaging facility for use of their confocal microscope, to Michael Wendland at UC Berkeley for performing the cell phantom MRI, and to Stanford University?s Environmental Measurements Facility for running the ICP samples. We would also like to recognize the laboratories of Professors Arash Komeili and Steven Conolly at UC Berkeley for their scientific advice. All animal work adhered to the standards set forth by the NIH and was approved by the Jackson Laboratories Animal Care and Use Committee. The data reported in this manuscript was supported in part by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under award numbers 1R43EB019239-01 and 1R43TR001202-01. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the funding sources. Authors K.R.L., A.W., P.C., C.S.F., L.K., J.C.B., A.C.C., A.V.B., B.W.R., and C.B.B. were all employees of Bell Biosystems Inc. during the course of this research, and possess stock options in the company. All other authors declare they have no conflict of interest.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, World Molecular Imaging Society.
PY - 2018/2/1
Y1 - 2018/2/1
N2 - Purpose: The purposes of this study are to characterize magneto-endosymbiont (ME) labeling of mammalian cells and to discern the subcellular fate of these living contrast agents. MEs are novel magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents that are being used for cell tracking studies. Understanding the fate of MEs in host cells is valuable for designing in vivo cell tracking experiments. Procedures: The ME’s surface epitopes, contrast-producing paramagnetic magnetosomal iron, and genome were studied using immunocytochemistry (ICC), Fe and MRI contrast measurements, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), respectively. These assays, coupled with other common assays, enabled validation of ME cell labeling and dissection of ME subcellular processing. Results: The assays mentioned above provide qualitative and quantitative assessments of cell labeling, the subcellular localization and the fate of MEs. ICC results, with an ME-specific antibody, qualitatively shows homogenous labeling with MEs. The ferrozine assay shows that MEs have an average of 7 fg Fe/ME, ∼30 % of which contributes to MRI contrast and ME-labeled MDA-MB-231 (MDA-231) cells generally have 2.4 pg Fe/cell, implying ∼350 MEs/cell. Adjusting the concentration of Fe in the ME growth media reduces the concentration of non-MRI contrast-producing Fe. Results from the qPCR assay, which quantifies ME genomes in labeled cells, shows that processing of MEs begins within 24 h in MDA-231 cells. ICC results suggest this intracellular digestion of MEs occurs by the lysosomal degradation pathway. MEs coated with listeriolysin O (LLO) are able to escape the primary phagosome, but subsequently co-localize with LC3, an autophagy-associated molecule, and are processed for digestion. In embryos, where autophagy is transiently suppressed, MEs show an increased capacity for survival and even replication. Finally, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of ME-labeled MDA-231 cells confirms that the magnetosomes (the MRI contrast-producing particles) remain intact and enable in vivo cell tracking. Conclusions: MEs are used to label mammalian cells for the purpose of cell tracking in vivo, with MRI. Various assays described herein (ICC, ferrozine, and qPCR) allow qualitative and quantitative assessments of labeling efficiency and provide a detailed understanding of subcellular processing of MEs. In some cell types, MEs are digested, but the MRI-producing particles remain. Coating with LLO allows MEs to escape the primary phagosome, enhances retention slightly, and confirms that MEs are ultimately processed by autophagy. Numerous intracellular bacteria and all endosymbiotically derived organelles have evolved molecular mechanisms to avoid intracellular clearance, and identification of the specific processes involved in ME clearance provides a framework on which to develop MEs with enhanced retention in mammalian cells.
AB - Purpose: The purposes of this study are to characterize magneto-endosymbiont (ME) labeling of mammalian cells and to discern the subcellular fate of these living contrast agents. MEs are novel magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents that are being used for cell tracking studies. Understanding the fate of MEs in host cells is valuable for designing in vivo cell tracking experiments. Procedures: The ME’s surface epitopes, contrast-producing paramagnetic magnetosomal iron, and genome were studied using immunocytochemistry (ICC), Fe and MRI contrast measurements, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), respectively. These assays, coupled with other common assays, enabled validation of ME cell labeling and dissection of ME subcellular processing. Results: The assays mentioned above provide qualitative and quantitative assessments of cell labeling, the subcellular localization and the fate of MEs. ICC results, with an ME-specific antibody, qualitatively shows homogenous labeling with MEs. The ferrozine assay shows that MEs have an average of 7 fg Fe/ME, ∼30 % of which contributes to MRI contrast and ME-labeled MDA-MB-231 (MDA-231) cells generally have 2.4 pg Fe/cell, implying ∼350 MEs/cell. Adjusting the concentration of Fe in the ME growth media reduces the concentration of non-MRI contrast-producing Fe. Results from the qPCR assay, which quantifies ME genomes in labeled cells, shows that processing of MEs begins within 24 h in MDA-231 cells. ICC results suggest this intracellular digestion of MEs occurs by the lysosomal degradation pathway. MEs coated with listeriolysin O (LLO) are able to escape the primary phagosome, but subsequently co-localize with LC3, an autophagy-associated molecule, and are processed for digestion. In embryos, where autophagy is transiently suppressed, MEs show an increased capacity for survival and even replication. Finally, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of ME-labeled MDA-231 cells confirms that the magnetosomes (the MRI contrast-producing particles) remain intact and enable in vivo cell tracking. Conclusions: MEs are used to label mammalian cells for the purpose of cell tracking in vivo, with MRI. Various assays described herein (ICC, ferrozine, and qPCR) allow qualitative and quantitative assessments of labeling efficiency and provide a detailed understanding of subcellular processing of MEs. In some cell types, MEs are digested, but the MRI-producing particles remain. Coating with LLO allows MEs to escape the primary phagosome, enhances retention slightly, and confirms that MEs are ultimately processed by autophagy. Numerous intracellular bacteria and all endosymbiotically derived organelles have evolved molecular mechanisms to avoid intracellular clearance, and identification of the specific processes involved in ME clearance provides a framework on which to develop MEs with enhanced retention in mammalian cells.
KW - Autophagy
KW - Cell tracking
KW - Endosymbiosis
KW - Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
KW - Magnetotactic bacteria
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U2 - 10.1007/s11307-017-1094-6
DO - 10.1007/s11307-017-1094-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 28631141
AN - SCOPUS:85021180503
SN - 1536-1632
VL - 20
SP - 55
EP - 64
JO - Molecular Imaging and Biology
JF - Molecular Imaging and Biology
IS - 1
ER -