1. Time-lapse Imaging of Mitosis After siRNA Transfection
- Author
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Katharine S. Ullman, Douglas R. Mackay, and Christopher K. Rodesch
- Subjects
Chromosome movement ,General Chemical Engineering ,Population ,Transfection ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Histones ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Live cell imaging ,Fluorescence microscope ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,RNA, Small Interfering ,education ,Mitosis ,030304 developmental biology ,mitosis ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,General Neuroscience ,live imaging ,Cell cycle ,Cell biology ,Cellular Biology ,Histone ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,siRNA ,biology.protein ,microscopy ,Issue 40 ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Changes in cellular organization and chromosome dynamics that occur during mitosis are tightly coordinated to ensure accurate inheritance of genomic and cellular content. Hallmark events of mitosis, such as chromosome movement, can be readily tracked on an individual cell basis using time-lapse fluorescence microscopy of mammalian cell lines expressing specific GFP-tagged proteins. In combination with RNAi-based depletion, this can be a powerful method for pinpointing the stage(s) of mitosis where defects occur after levels of a particular protein have been lowered. In this protocol, we present a basic method for assessing the effect of depleting a potential mitotic regulatory protein on the timing of mitosis. Cells are transfected with siRNA, placed in a stage-top incubation chamber, and imaged using an automated fluorescence microscope. We describe how to use software to set up a time-lapse experiment, how to process the image sequences to make either still-image montages or movies, and how to quantify and analyze the timing of mitotic stages using a cell-line expressing mCherry-tagged histone H2B. Finally, we discuss important considerations for designing a time-lapse experiment. This strategy is complementary to other approaches and offers the advantages of 1) sensitivity to changes in kinetics that might not be observed when looking at cells as a population and 2) analysis of mitosis without the need to synchronize the cell cycle using drug treatments. The visual information from such imaging experiments not only allows the sub-stages of mitosis to be assessed, but can also provide unexpected insight that would not be apparent from cell cycle analysis by FACS.
- Published
- 2010
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