Abstract

NF-κB is a transcription factor that upon activation undergoes cycles of cytoplasmic-to-nuclear and nuclear-to-cytoplasmic transport, giving rise to so called “oscillations”. In turn, oscillations tune the transcriptional output. Since a detailed understanding of oscillations requires a systems biology approach, we developed a method to acquire and analyze large volumes of data on NF-κB dynamics in single cells. We measured the time evolution of the nuclear to total ratio of GFP-p65 in knock-in mouse embryonic fibroblasts using time-lapse imaging. We automatically produced a precise segmentation of nucleus and cytoplasm based on an accurate estimation of the signal and image background. Finally, we defined a set of quantifiers that describe the oscillatory dynamics, which are internally normalized and can be used to compare data recorded by different labs. Using our method, we analyzed NF-κB dynamics in over 2000 cells exposed to different concentrations of TNF- α α. We reproduced known features of the NF-κB system, such as the heterogeneity of the response in the cell population upon stimulation and we confirmed that a fraction of the responding cells does not oscillate. We also unveiled important features: the second and third oscillatory peaks were often comparable to the first one, a basal amount of nuclear NF-κB could be detected in unstimulated cells, and at any time a small fraction of unstimulated cells showed spontaneous random activation of the NF-κB system. Our work lays the ground for systematic, high-throughput, and unbiased analysis of the dynamics of transcription factors that can shuttle between the nucleus and other cell compartments.

Highlights

  • The tight control of transcription factors activity is mandatory to warrant an adequate cell response to environmental cues

  • Rationale To obtain a unified definition of the NF-kB oscillatory response, we have developed a method and its software implementation to rigorously describe the dynamics of fluorescently labeled NF-kB molecules in hundreds of cells using time-lapse microscopy

  • To segment the cell boundaries we identify the pixels belonging to the cytoplasm as those that have intensities higher than the background (Details in Document S1)

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Summary

Introduction

The tight control of transcription factors activity is mandatory to warrant an adequate cell response to environmental cues. Several transcription factors are located in the cytosol or associated to membranes, and are activated by specific signaling pathways to enter the nucleus where they activate the transcription of specific genes Most analyses of these activation processes are done at cell population level, for example by immunoblotting nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions. Some signaling pathways give rise to oscillating behaviors of proteins that are imported and exported from the nucleus several times: examples are NF-kB, p53 and ERK in mammalian cells [1,2,3,4], and Ace1p and Msn in yeast [5,6]. Peak3/Peak: ratio between the NT values of the third and the second peak. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0090104.t002

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