Dynamic single-cell imaging of direct reprogramming reveals an early specifying event (original) (raw)

Nature Biotechnology volume 28, pages 521–526 (2010)Cite this article

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Abstract

The study of induced pluripotency often relies on experimental approaches that average measurements across a large population of cells, the majority of which do not become pluripotent. Here we used high-resolution, time-lapse imaging to trace the reprogramming process over 2 weeks from single mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) to pluripotency factor–positive colonies. This enabled us to calculate a normalized cell-of-origin reprogramming efficiency that takes into account only the initial MEFs that respond to form reprogrammed colonies rather than the larger number of final colonies. Furthermore, this retrospective analysis revealed that successfully reprogramming cells undergo a rapid shift in their proliferative rate that coincides with a reduction in cellular area. This event occurs as early as the first cell division and with similar kinetics in all cells that form induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell colonies. These data contribute to the theoretical modeling of reprogramming and suggest that certain parts of the reprogramming process follow defined rather than stochastic steps.

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Acknowledgements

We thank A. Carpenter and M. Bray from the Broad Imaging Platform for help with the initial CellProfiler image analysis pipeline. We thank E.S. Lander and C. Bock and R.P. Koche for critical reading of the manuscript as well as M. Thomson, M. Staller, A. De Los Angeles and J. Dennett for technical assistance and intellectual input. I.N. was supported by a Merck postdoctoral fellowship and an Alon fellowship. A.R. was supported by a Career Award at the Scientific Interface from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, an National Institutes of Health Pioneer Award and the Sloan Foundation. A.R. is an Early Career Scientist of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and an Investigator of the Merkin Foundation for Stem Cell Research at the Broad Institute. A.M. was supported by the Pew Charitable Trust and a New Investigator grant by the Massachusetts Life Science Center (MLSC). This work was funded by the Pew and MLSC.

Author information

Author notes

  1. Zachary D Smith and Iftach Nachman: These authors contributed equally to this work.

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
    Zachary D Smith, Iftach Nachman, Aviv Regev & Alexander Meissner
  2. Harvard Stem Cell Institute and Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
    Zachary D Smith & Alexander Meissner
  3. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
    Iftach Nachman
  4. Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
    Aviv Regev

Authors

  1. Zachary D Smith
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  2. Iftach Nachman
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  3. Aviv Regev
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  4. Alexander Meissner
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Contributions

Z.D.S., I.N., A.R. and A.M. conceived the experiments and wrote the manuscript. Z.D.S. generated all reagents and performed the experiments. Z.D.S. and I.N. performed the analysis.

Corresponding author

Correspondence toAlexander Meissner.

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The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Supplementary information

Supplementary Text and Figures

Supplementary Figs. 1–10 (PDF 2399 kb)

Supplementary Movie 1

Time-lapse movie of a single (1/16 of the 4×4) monitored site (upper right corner of Fig. 1a,b,c and same as 1d). The movie follows the YFP labeled fibroblasts (#16 in Fig. 1b) as it divides and forms a colony over the course of 12 days. This MEF exhibits an immediate change in its proliferative behavior and size maintenance, rapidly forming many small cells that eventually give rise to multiple distinct iPS colonies within the formed cluster (shown in Figure 1d). Non responding induced MEFs are apparent in the upper right and lower left hand corner for immediate comparison to the reprogramming lineage; these cells divide more slowly and maintain large, asymmetrical mesenchymal characteristics. Time in days is shown and the arrow in the first frame points to the source cell. (MOV 2398 kb)

Supplementary Movie 2

Time-lapse movie of a global 5×5 field at 10× magnification in phase contrast and with GFP-labeled MEFs highlighted over a 14 day experiment. A single primary colony emerges at Day 4 while subsequent satellites continue to accumulate from Day 6 to the termination of the experiment at Day 14. (MOV 4536 kb)

Supplementary Movie 3

Time-lapse movie following a YFP-labeled MEF progressing to a lineage in which multiple iPS cell colonies (∼6) are formed (Fig. 2d shows selected images of this movie in grayscale). These subpopulations within the responding lineage can be clearly demarcated before unique iPS cell colonies are observed. Within the earliest time points, an additional YFP labeled responding population can be observed at the left, but these cells do not progress through the preliminary size reducing response, are not accountable for an iPS cell colony, and are lost or scored as non-proliferative by Day 6. Time in days is shown and the arrow in the first frame points to the source cell. (MOV 2760 kb)

Supplementary Movies 4a

Distinct morphologies of responding MEFs characterized from time-lapse imaging. a. Arrested/Apoptotic (A) responses in GFP, RFP, and YFP labeled MEFs. Several of these cells initially exhibit attributes of a positive response to factor induction as outlined in text but either arrest/apoptose or transition to a slower proliferative rate. (MOV 2429 kb)

Supplementary Movies 4b

Distinct morphologies of responding MEFs characterized from time-lapse imaging. b. Slow dividing (SD) YFP-labeled MEFs that do not reprogram, but slowly divide and maintain many of the morphological attributes of the original MEF population. (MOV 2353 kb)

Supplementary Movies 4c

Distinct morphologies of responding MEFs characterized from time-lapse imaging. c. Fast Dividing Fibroblast (FD) YFP labeled MEFs that demonstrate a transition to a rapid cell cycle but become more striated and grow as a mesenchymal monolayer. Note, that within this fast dividing fibroblast population, three ectopic, unlabeled satellite colonies emerge within the final 4 days of the 14 daytime series. (MOV 3332 kb)

Supplementary Movies 4d

Distinct morphologies of responding MEFs characterized from time-lapse imaging. d. iPS Forming (iPS) A RFP labeled MEF exhibiting an immediate change in proliferative rate and cell size, forming small clusters of dividing cells that lead to the formation of compacted subpopulations which give rise to pluripotency marker positive iPS cells. (MOV 2273 kb)

Supplementary Movie 5

Time-lapse movie of a MEF infected with an EGFP labeled p53 targeting shRNA (Upper Panels) compared to an internal RFP labeled control MEF (Lower Panels) within the same experiment (Fig. 4b shows selected images from these movies). Size and proliferative rate are nearly identical within the first four days, but only the RFP labeled MEF progeny continue along an expected trajectory to a compact iPS colony whereas the p53 depleted MEF slows its proliferative rate and forms a colony that is less compact compared to the wild type control. Note that this p53 KD derived colony remains negative for classical pluripotency markers at the final time point (14 days). Time in days is shown and the arrow in the first frame points to the source cell. (MOV 5070 kb)

Supplementary Movie 6

iPS cell colonies exhibit conserved formation dynamics. Shown are 12 independent iPS cell forming lineages imaged from the time of factor induction to termination after 14 days. As shown in Figure 5, each population is governed by near identical kinetics and concludes in a tightly distributed time of primary colony emergence that is unlikely to be dictated by a single low probability stochastic event. (MOV 3141 kb)

Supplementary Movie 7

Representative population wide overlays of RFP and YFP labeled inducible MEFs over a 12 day experiment and from which the YFP labeled fibroblast labeled #16 in Figure 1 was identified as a cell of origin for a primary iPS cell colony. Similar overlays were generated for every experiment and used to both identify primary colonies for downstream analysis and to gauge global reprogramming trends. (MOV 6515 kb)

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Smith, Z., Nachman, I., Regev, A. et al. Dynamic single-cell imaging of direct reprogramming reveals an early specifying event.Nat Biotechnol 28, 521–526 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt.1632

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