Reconstruction of Vesicle Assemblies with DNA Nanorulers for Resolving Heterogeneity of Vesicles in Live Cells

Author:

Zhang Yueyue1,Liu Jiangbo1,Mao Xiuhai1,Fan Hongxuan2,Li Fan1,Wang Shaopeng1,Li Jiang3,Li Min1,Zuo Xiaolei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Molecular Medicine Shanghai Key Laboratory for Nucleic Acid Chemistry and Nanomedicine Renji Hospital School of Medicine Shanghai Jiao Tong University Shanghai 200127 China

2. Shanghai Soong Ching Ling School Shanghai 201700 China

3. Institute of Materials Biology Shanghai University Shanghai 200444 China

Abstract

AbstractNanoscale vesicles such as synaptic vesicles play a pivotal role in efficient interneuronal communications in vivo. However, the coexistence of single vesicle and vesicle clusters in living cells increases the heterogeneity of vesicle populations, which largely complicates the quantitative analysis of the vesicles. The high spatiotemporal monitoring of vesicle assemblies is currently incompletely resolved. Here, this work uses synthetic vesicles and DNA nanorulers to reconstruct in vitro the vesicle assemblies that mimic vesicle clusters in living cells. DNA nanorulers program the lateral distance of vesicle assemblies from 3 to 10 nm. This work uses the carbon fiber nanoelectrode (CFNE) to amperometric monitor artificial vesicle assemblies with sub‐10 nm interspaces, and obtain a larger proportion of complex events. This work resolves the heterogeneity of individual vesicle release kinetics in PC12 cells with the temporal resolution down to ≈0.1 ms. This work further analyzes the aggregation state of intracellular vesicles and the exocytosis of living cells with electrochemical vesicle cytometry. The results indicate that the exocytosis of vesicle clusters is critically dependent on the size of clusters. This technology has the potential as a tool to shed light on the heterogeneity analysis of vesicle populations.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai Municipality

Key Technologies Research and Development Program

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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