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Method Article
* Wspomniani autorzy wnieśli do projektu równy wkład.
Laser microirradiation is a useful tool for studies of DNA repair in living cells. A methodological approach for the use of UVA lasers to induce various DNA lesions is shown. We have optimized a method for local microirradiation that maintains the normal cell cycle; thus, irradiated cells proceed through mitosis.
Local microirradiation with lasers represents a useful tool for studies of DNA-repair-related processes in live cells. Here, we describe a methodological approach to analyzing protein kinetics at DNA lesions over time or protein-protein interactions on locally microirradiated chromatin. We also show how to recognize individual phases of the cell cycle using the Fucci cellular system to study cell-cycle-dependent protein kinetics at DNA lesions. A methodological description of the use of two UV lasers (355 nm and 405 nm) to induce different types of DNA damage is also presented. Only the cells microirradiated by the 405-nm diode laser proceeded through mitosis normally and were devoid of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs). We also show how microirradiated cells can be fixed at a given time point to perform immunodetection of the endogenous proteins of interest. For the DNA repair studies, we additionally describe the use of biophysical methods including FRAP (Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching) and FLIM (Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscopy) in cells with spontaneously occurring DNA damage foci. We also show an application of FLIM-FRET (Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer) in experimental studies of protein-protein interactions.
DNA damage leads to the appearance of DNA lesions consisting of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs), 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine, and single-strand or double-strand breaks1,2. γ-rays are the form of ionizing radiation with the highest energy and high penetrance, thus this source of radiation is widely used in radiotherapy3. On the other hand, experimentally induced DNA damage caused by UV lasers mimics natural exposure to UV light. UVA microirradiation, as a microscopic method, represents an experimental tool for studying DNA damage in individual living cells. Microirradiation was used for the first time 40 years ago in order to reveal the organization of chromosome regions4,5. This technique is highly dependent on either the functional properties of confocal microscopes or the technical limits of modern nanoscopy. To induce DNA lesions, cells can be presensitized by 5' bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) or Hoechst 33342 prior to UV irradiation. Bártová et al.6 previously described the presensitization step, and recently we optimized this microirradiation technique in order to avoid cell death, or apoptosis. For example, the use of a 405-nm UV laser (without Hoechst 33342 presensitization) leads to the induction of 53BP1-positive double-strand breaks (DSBs) at the expense of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs). On the other hand, presensitization steps combined with UV microirradiation induce very high levels of CPDs and DSBs simultaneously7,8. This methodology is difficult to apply to the study of a single DNA repair pathway.
With microirradiation, it is possible to analyze protein recruitment, kinetics, and interaction at DNA lesions in living cells. An example of this method was published by Luijsterburg et al.9 for heterochromatin protein 1β, and we recently showed for the first time that the pluripotency factor Oct4 and a protein associated with Cajal bodies, coilin, are recruited to UV-induced DNA lesions6,10. Protein kinetics at these DNA lesions can also be studied using the FRAP (Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching)11,12,13 or FRET (Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer) techniques14,15. These methods have the potential to reveal simple diffusion of proteins at DNA lesions or protein-protein interactions. A useful tool for additional characterization of proteins is FLIM (Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscopy) or its combination with FRET technology (FRET-FLIM)16. These methods enable the study of processes in living cells that are stably or transiently expressing the protein of interest tagged by a fluorescent molecule17. Here, an example of exponential decay time (τ) for GFP-tagged p53 protein and its interaction partner, mCherry-tagged 53BP1, playing an important role in DNA damage response18,19 is shown. The parameter τ, the lifetime of the fluorochrome provided by FLIM calculations, is specific for a given fluorescence dye, its binding abilities, and its cellular environment. Therefore, this method can show us distinctions between protein subpopulations, their binding abilities, and their functional properties after, for example, DNA damage.
Here, an outline of the methodological approaches of the advanced microscopy techniques that is used in our laboratory to study time-specific protein recruitment, kinetics, diffusion, and protein-protein interactions at the site of microirradiated chromatin is presented. The step-by-step methodology for the induction of local DNA lesions in living cells, and a description of methodologies useful for studies of DNA-damage-related events at locally induced DNA lesions caused by UV lasers are provided.
1. Cultivation of Cell Lines
2. Cell Transfection
3. Induction of Local DNA Lesions and Confocal Microscopy
4. Immunofluorescence Staining
5. Fluorescence Lifetime Image (FLIM) Microscopy
6. Donor Lifetime Using a FLIM Script and Calculation of FRET Efficiency
7. FRET Efficiency Using the FLIM-FRET Script
8. FRAP Analysis
Using advanced confocal microscopy, we observed an accumulation of mCherry-tagged 53BP1 and mCherry-PCNA proteins at DNA lesions. Analyses were performed by local microirradiation of living cells. To recognize the nuclear distribution patterns of DNA-repair-related proteins in individual cell cycle phases, we used the Fucci cellular system, by which it is possible to determine the G1, early S, and G2 phases of the cell cycle (Figure 1). The biological applica...
Microscopy techniques represent basic tools in research laboratories. Here, a brief description of the methods used for the study of protein recruitment and kinetics at DNA lesions is presented. We especially noted our experimental experience in the field of local microirradiation of living cells, and we discuss the study of protein kinetics by FRAP and protein-protein interaction at DNA lesions by acceptor-bleaching FRET28 and its advanced modification FRET-FLIM (Figure 4A
The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.
This work was supported by the Grant Agency of the Czech Republic, project P302-12-G157. Experiments were also supported by the Czech-Norwegian Research Programme CZ09, which is supervised by Norwegian funds, and by the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport of the Czech Republic (grant number: 7F14369).
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Cell cultivation | |||
HeLa | ATCC | CCL-2TM | |
ES-D3 [D3] | ATCC | CRL-11632TM | |
HeLa -Fucci cells | http://ruo.mbl.co.jp/bio/e/product/flprotein/fucci.html | ||
DMEM | PAN-Biotech | P03-0710 | |
DMEM high glucose | Sigma-Aldrich | D6429-500ML | |
Fetal bovine serum (FBS) | HyClone | SV30180.03 | |
ES Cell FBS | Gibco | 16141-079 | |
Non-Essential Amino Acids (NEAA) | Gibco | 11140-035 | |
mLIF (mouse Leukemia Inhibitor Factor) | Merck Millipore | ESG1107 | |
MTG (1-Thioglycerol) | Sigma-Aldrich | M6145-25ML | |
Penicillin-Streptomycin Solution | Biosera | XC-A4122/100 | |
Trypsin - EDTA | Biosera | XC-T1717/100 | dilute with 1 × PBS in ratio 1:6 |
Nunclon cell culture dishes | Sigma-Aldrich | P7866 | cultivation of mESCs D3 cells |
µ-Dish 35m+A15:I35m Grid-500 | Ibidi GmbH | 81166 | microscopic dish |
0.2% Gelatine | Sigma-Aldrich | G1890-100G | dilute in destille water and autoclaved |
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Cell transfection | |||
GFP-p53 plasmid | Addgene | 12091 | |
mCherry-PCNA plasmid | generous gift from Cristina Cardoso, Technische Universität Darmstadt | ||
mCherry-53BP1 plasmid | Addgene | 19835 | |
Metafecetene | Biontex Laboratories GmbH | T020–2.0 | |
10 × PBS | Thermo Fisher Scientific | AM9625 | for transfection use 1 × PBS diluted in nuclease-free water |
5-bromo-2’-deoxy-uridine | Sigma-Aldrich | 11296736001 | |
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Confocal microscopy | |||
Microscope Leica TCS SP5 | Leica Microsystems | ||
Microscope Leica TCS SP8 | Leica Microsystems | ||
White-light laser | Leica Microsystems | ||
355-nm laser | Coherent Inc. | laser power 80 mW | |
405-nm laser | Leica Microsystems | laser power 50 mW | |
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Immunofluorescence staining | |||
Coverslip | VWR International Ltd | 631-1580 | |
4% paraformaldehyde | Affymetrix | 19943 1 LT | |
Triton X100 | MP Biomedicals | 2194854 | |
Saponin from quillaja bark | Sigma-Aldrich | S4521 | |
BSA | Sigma-Aldrich | A2153 | |
53BP1 | Abcam | ab21083 | primary antibody |
AlexaFluore 647 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | A27040 | secondary antibody |
Vectashield | Vector Laboratories Ltd | H-1000 | mounting medium |
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