Author:
Cotton Michael J.,Ariel Pablo,Chen Kaiwen,Walcott Vanessa A.,Dixit Michelle,Breau Keith A.,Hinesley Caroline M.,Kedziora Katarzyna M.,Tang Cynthia Y.,Zheng Anna,Magness Scott T.,Burclaff Joseph
Abstract
AbstractThe intestinal epithelium dynamically controls cell cycle, yet no experimental platform exists for directly analyzing cell cycle phases in non-immortalized human intestinal epithelial cells (IECs). Here, we present two reporters and a complete platform for analyzing cell cycle phases in live primary human IECs. We interrogate the transcriptional identity of IECs grown on soft collagen, develop two fluorescent cell cycle reporter IEC lines, design and 3D print a collagen press to make chamber slides for optimal imaging while supporting primary human IEC growth, live image cell cycle dynamics, then assemble a computational pipeline building upon free-to-use programs for semi-automated analysis of cell cycle phases. The PIP-FUCCI construct allows for assigning cell cycle phase from a single image of living cells, and our PIP-H2A construct allows for semi-automated direct quantification of cell cycle phase lengths using our publicly available computational pipeline. Treating PIP-FUCCI IECs with oligomycin demonstrates that inhibiting mitochondrial respiration lengthens G1 phase, and PIP-H2A cells allow us to measure that oligomycin differentially lengthens S and G2/M phases across heterogeneous IECs. These platforms provide opportunities for future studies on pharmaceutical effects on the intestinal epithelium, cell cycle regulation, and more.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Katherine E. Bullard Charitable Trust for Gastrointestinal Stem Cell and Regenerative Research
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC