Davidson Patricia M, Sliz Josiah, Isermann Philipp, Denais Celine, Lammerding Jan
Weill Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
Integr Biol (Camb). 2015 Dec;7(12):1534-46. doi: 10.1039/c5ib00200a. Epub 2015 Nov 9.
The ability of cells to migrate through tissues and interstitial spaces is an essential factor during development and tissue homeostasis, immune cell mobility, and in various human diseases. Deformation of the nucleus and its associated lamina during 3-D migration is gathering increasing interest in the context of cancer metastasis, with the underlying hypothesis that a softer nucleus, resulting from reduced levels of lamin A/C, may aid tumour spreading. However, current methods to study the migration of cells in confining three dimensional (3-D) environments are limited by their imprecise control over the confinement, physiological relevance, and/or compatibility with high resolution imaging techniques. We describe the design of a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microfluidic device composed of channels with precisely-defined constrictions mimicking physiological environments that enable high resolution imaging of live and fixed cells. The device promotes easy cell loading and rapid, yet long-lasting (>24 hours) chemotactic gradient formation without the need for continuous perfusion. Using this device, we obtained detailed, quantitative measurements of dynamic nuclear deformation as cells migrate through tight spaces, revealing distinct phases of nuclear translocation through the constriction, buckling of the nuclear lamina, and severe intranuclear strain. Furthermore, we found that lamin A/C-deficient cells exhibited increased and more plastic nuclear deformations compared to wild-type cells but only minimal changes in nuclear volume, implying that low lamin A/C levels facilitate migration through constrictions by increasing nuclear deformability rather than compressibility. The integration of our migration devices with high resolution time-lapse imaging provides a powerful new approach to study intracellular mechanics and dynamics in a variety of physiologically-relevant applications, ranging from cancer cell invasion to immune cell recruitment.
细胞在组织和细胞间隙中迁移的能力是发育、组织稳态、免疫细胞移动以及多种人类疾病过程中的一个重要因素。在三维迁移过程中,细胞核及其相关核纤层的变形在癌症转移背景下受到越来越多的关注,其潜在假设是,由于核纤层蛋白A/C水平降低导致的较软细胞核可能有助于肿瘤扩散。然而,目前用于研究细胞在受限三维环境中迁移的方法受到其对限制条件的不精确控制、生理相关性和/或与高分辨率成像技术兼容性的限制。我们描述了一种聚二甲基硅氧烷(PDMS)微流控装置的设计,该装置由具有精确限定收缩部分的通道组成,模拟生理环境,能够对活细胞和固定细胞进行高分辨率成像。该装置便于细胞加载,并能快速形成持久(>24小时)的趋化梯度,无需连续灌注。使用该装置,我们获得了细胞在紧密空间中迁移时动态核变形的详细定量测量结果,揭示了核通过收缩部分的不同转运阶段、核纤层的弯曲以及严重的核内应变。此外,我们发现与野生型细胞相比,缺乏核纤层蛋白A/C的细胞表现出增加且更具可塑性的核变形,但核体积变化最小,这意味着低水平的核纤层蛋白A/C通过增加核变形能力而非压缩能力促进细胞通过收缩部分迁移。我们的迁移装置与高分辨率延时成像的结合提供了一种强大的新方法,可用于研究各种生理相关应用中的细胞内力学和动力学,从癌细胞侵袭到免疫细胞募集。