A versatile system to record cell-cell interactions

Author:

Tang Rui1ORCID,Murray Christopher W2ORCID,Linde Ian L3,Kramer Nicholas J14ORCID,Lyu Zhonglin5,Tsai Min K1,Chen Leo C1ORCID,Cai Hongchen1,Gitler Aaron D1ORCID,Engleman Edgar236ORCID,Lee Wonjae5,Winslow Monte M126ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, United States

2. Cancer Biology Program, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, United States

3. Immunology Program, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, United States

4. Neuroscience Program, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, United States

5. Department of Neurosurgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, United States

6. Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, United States

Abstract

Cell-cell interactions influence all aspects of development, homeostasis, and disease. In cancer, interactions between cancer cells and stromal cells play a major role in nearly every step of carcinogenesis. Thus, the ability to record cell-cell interactions would facilitate mechanistic delineation of the role of the cancer microenvironment. Here, we describe GFP-based Touching Nexus (G-baToN) which relies upon nanobody-directed fluorescent protein transfer to enable sensitive and specific labeling of cells after cell-cell interactions. G-baToN is a generalizable system that enables physical contact-based labeling between various human and mouse cell types, including endothelial cell-pericyte, neuron-astrocyte, and diverse cancer-stromal cell pairs. A suite of orthogonal baToN tools enables reciprocal cell-cell labeling, interaction-dependent cargo transfer, and the identification of higher order cell-cell interactions across a wide range of cell types. The ability to track physically interacting cells with these simple and sensitive systems will greatly accelerate our understanding of the outputs of cell-cell interactions in cancer as well as across many biological processes.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program

National Science Foundation

Stanford University

National Institutes of Health

Stanford University School of Medicine

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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