Abstract

BackgroundQuantifying gene expression at single cell level is fundamental for the complete characterization of synthetic gene circuits, due to the significant impact of noise and inter-cellular variability on the system’s functionality. Commercial set-ups that allow the acquisition of fluorescent signal at single cell level (flow cytometers or quantitative microscopes) are expensive apparatuses that are hardly affordable by small laboratories.MethodsA protocol that makes a standard optical microscope able to acquire quantitative, single cell, fluorescent data from a bacterial population transformed with synthetic gene circuitry is presented. Single cell fluorescence values, acquired with a microscope set-up and processed with custom-made software, are compared with results that were obtained with a flow cytometer in a bacterial population transformed with the same gene circuitry.ResultsThe high correlation between data from the two experimental set-ups, with a correlation coefficient computed over the tested dynamic range > 0.99, proves that a standard optical microscope– when coupled with appropriate software for image processing– might be used for quantitative single-cell fluorescence measurements. The calibration of the set-up, together with its validation, is described.ConclusionsThe experimental protocol described in this paper makes quantitative measurement of single cell fluorescence accessible to laboratories equipped with standard optical microscope set-ups. Our method allows for an affordable measurement/quantification of intercellular variability, whose better understanding of this phenomenon will improve our comprehension of cellular behaviors and the design of synthetic gene circuits. All the required software is freely available to the synthetic biology community (MUSIQ Microscope flUorescence SIngle cell Quantification).

Highlights

  • Quantifying gene expression at single cell level is fundamental for the complete characterization of synthetic gene circuits, due to the significant impact of noise and inter-cellular variability on the system’s functionality

  • Preliminary experiments were carried out for the appropriate set-up calibration and procedure validation. Data collected using this original protocol were compared to the single cell fluorescence level measured with a flow cytometer

  • The results show a substantial equivalence of both the techniques

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Summary

Introduction

Quantifying gene expression at single cell level is fundamental for the complete characterization of synthetic gene circuits, due to the significant impact of noise and inter-cellular variability on the system’s functionality. Commercial set-ups that allow the acquisition of fluorescent signal at single cell level (flow cytometers or quantitative microscopes) are expensive apparatuses that are hardly affordable by small laboratories. The rigorous quantification of gene expression is fundamental for the characterization of synthetic gene circuits’ functionality in transformant cells In this regard the importance of phenotypic variability within an isogenic population has recently emerged [1]. Exploring this facet of synthetic biology requires the ability to monitor mRNA or protein concentrations at the single cell level. These measurements are not achievable with the Quantification of fluorescent signals at the single cell level is typically achieved using a cytofluorimeter [5].

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