Abstract

Imaging-derived mean square displacement (iMSD) is used to address the structural and dynamic properties of subcellular nanostructures, such as vesicles involved in the endo/exocytotic trafficking of solutes and biomolecules. iMSD relies on standard time-lapse imaging, is compatible with any optical setup, and does not need to dwell on single objects to extract trajectories. From each iMSD trace, a unique triplet of average structural and dynamic parameters (i.e., size, local diffusivity, anomalous coefficient) is calculated and combined to build the "iMSD signature" of the nanostructure under study. The potency of this approach is proved here with the exemplary case of macropinosomes. These vesicles evolve in time, changing their average size, number, and dynamic properties passing from early to late stages of intracellular trafficking. As a control, insulin secretory granules (ISGs) are used as a reference for subcellular structures that live in a stationary state in which the average structural and dynamic properties of the whole population of objects are invariant in time. The iMSD analysis highlights these peculiar features quantitatively and paves the way to similar applications at the sub-cellular level, both in the physiological and pathological states.

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