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Unsupervised fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy for high content and high throughput screening.

Esposito A, Dohm CP, Bähr M, Wouters FS

Mol Cell Proteomics. 2007 Aug; 6(8):1446-54

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David Andrews, McMaster University, Ontario, Canada. F1000 Cell Biology

08 Nov 2007 | Technical Advance

The development of powerful new fluorescence imaging techniques is finally making understanding the molecular mechanisms responsible for spatiotemporal changes in cells in response to external and internal stimuli seem like an achievable goal instead of a fantasy. The authors show that lifetime detection provides excellent contrast independent of probe concentration and thereby permits quantitative comparison of individual cells and independent sets of cells while minimizing artifacts due to differences in brightness caused by pipetting and inhomogeneities in illumination or light capture.

They show that it is possible to quantitatively image the level of ubiquitination of a protein and detect the reduction in ubiquitination of mutant proteins in live cells.

By examining large numbers of cells using an automated imaging system, the authors were able to demonstrate that ubiquitination of some substrates is inherently heterogeneous, a result very difficult to obtain using biochemical analyses.

Competing interests: None declared

Andrews D: "The development of powerful new fluorescence imaging techniques is finally making understanding the molecular mechanisms..." Evaluation of: [Esposito A et al. Unsupervised fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy for high content and high throughput screening. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2007 Aug; 6(8):1446-54; doi: 10.1074/mcp.T700006-MCP200]. Faculty of 1000, 08 Nov 2007. F1000.com/1093823#eval548745

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Andrews D: 2007. F1000.com/1093823#eval548745

Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [Esposito A et al. Unsupervised fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy for high content and high throughput screening. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2007 Aug; 6(8):1446-54; doi: 10.1074/mcp.T700006-MCP200]. Faculty of 1000, 08 Nov 2007. F1000.com/1093823

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Faculty of 1000: 2007. F1000.com/1093823

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Proteomics and cellomics clearly benefit from the molecular insights in cellular biochemical events that can be obtained by advanced quantitative microscopy techniques like fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy and Förster resonance energy transfer imaging. The spectroscopic information detected at the molecular level can be combined with cellular morphological estimators, the analysis of cellular localization, and the identification of molecular or cellular subpopulations. This allows the creation of powerful assays to gain a detailed understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying spatiotemporal cellular responses to chemical and physical stimuli. This work demonstrates that the high content offered by these techniques can be combined with the high throughput levels offered by automation of a fluorescence lifetime imaging microscope setup capable of unsupervised operation and image analysis. Systems and software dedicated to image cytometry for analysis and sorting represent important emerging tools for the field of proteomics, interactomics, and cellomics. These techniques could soon become readily available both to academia and the drug screening community by the application of new all-solid-state technologies that may results in cost-effective turnkey systems. Here the application of this screening technique to the investigation of intracellular ubiquitination levels of alpha-synuclein and its familial mutations that are causative for Parkinson disease is shown. The finding of statistically lower ubiquitination of the mutant alpha-synuclein forms supports a role for this modification in the mechanism of pathological protein aggregation.

DOI: 10.1074/mcp.T700006-MCP200

PMID: 17510051

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