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1.
Development ; 151(4)2024 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38415752

ABSTRACT

Signal amplification based on the mechanism of hybridization chain reaction (HCR) provides a unified framework for multiplex, quantitative, high-resolution imaging of RNA and protein targets in highly autofluorescent samples. With conventional bandpass imaging, multiplexing is typically limited to four or five targets owing to the difficulty in separating signals generated by fluorophores with overlapping spectra. Spectral imaging has offered the conceptual promise of higher levels of multiplexing, but it has been challenging to realize this potential in highly autofluorescent samples, including whole-mount vertebrate embryos. Here, we demonstrate robust HCR spectral imaging with linear unmixing, enabling simultaneous imaging of ten RNA and/or protein targets in whole-mount zebrafish embryos and mouse brain sections. Further, we demonstrate that the amplified and unmixed signal in each of the ten channels is quantitative, enabling accurate and precise relative quantitation of RNA and/or protein targets with subcellular resolution, and RNA absolute quantitation with single-molecule resolution, in the anatomical context of highly autofluorescent samples.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic Imaging , Zebrafish , Animals , Mice , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , Embryo, Mammalian , RNA
2.
iScience ; 27(6): 109994, 2024 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38883841

ABSTRACT

Mitofusin-2 (MFN2), a large GTPase residing in the mitochondrial outer membrane and mutated in Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 2 disease (CMT2A), is a regulator of mitochondrial fusion and tethering with the ER. The role of MFN2 in mitochondrial transport has however remained elusive. Like MFN2, acetylated microtubules play key roles in mitochondria dynamics. Nevertheless, it is unknown if the α-tubulin acetylation cycle functionally interacts with MFN2. Here, we show that mitochondrial contacts with microtubules are sites of α-tubulin acetylation, which occurs through MFN2-mediated recruitment of α-tubulin acetyltransferase 1 (ATAT1). This activity is critical for MFN2-dependent regulation of mitochondria transport, and axonal degeneration caused by CMT2A MFN2 associated R94W and T105M mutations may depend on the inability to release ATAT1 at sites of mitochondrial contacts with microtubules. Our findings reveal a function for mitochondria in α-tubulin acetylation and suggest that disruption of this activity plays a role in the onset of MFN2-dependent CMT2A.

3.
J Mol Histol ; 39(1): 105-13, 2008 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17823845

ABSTRACT

Repulsive guidance molecule (RGM) a is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored plasma membrane protein that has been implicated in chemorepulsive axon guidance. Although RGMa binds the transmembrane receptor Neogenin, the developmental events controlled by the RGMa-Neogenin interactions in vivo remain largely unknown. We have cloned full-length RGMa from Xenopus borealis for the first time and identified two homologous genes referred to as RGMa1 and RGMa2. Here we show RGMa1 overexpression at 2-cell-stage resulted in cell death, which lead to an early embryonic lethal phenotype of the embryos. Time-lapse photomicroscopy revealed that embryos began to show initial morphological defects from approximately 5 h post-fertilization (hpf) which was then followed by extensive blastomere cell death at approximately 11 hpf. This phenotype was rescued by simultaneous knock down of RGMa using translation blocking anti-sense morpholinos. Knock down of the RGMa1 receptor Neogenin in RGMa1 overexpressing embryos was also able to rescue the phenotype. Together these results indicated that RGMa1 was signalling through Neogenin to induce cell death in the early embryo. While previous studies have suggested that Neogenin is a dependence receptor that induces cell death in the absence of RGM, we have instead shown that Neogenin-RGM interactions induce cell death in the early embryo. The roles of RGMa1 and Neogenin appear to be context specific so that their co-ordinated and regulated expressions are essential for normal development of the vertebrate embryo.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Xenopus Proteins/genetics , Xenopus/embryology , Xenopus/genetics , Animals , Cell Death , Cloning, Molecular , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Molecular Sequence Data , Phenotype , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Signal Transduction
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