Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3RE, United Kingdom
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Abstract |
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Individual chromosomes are not directly visible within the interphase nuclei of most somatic cells; they can only be seen during mitosis. We have developed a method that allows DNA strands to be observed directly in living cells, and we use it to analyze how mitotic chromosomes form. A fluorescent analogue (e.g., Cy5-dUTP) of the natural precursor, thymidine triphosphate, is introduced into cells, which are then grown on the heated stage of a confocal microscope. The analogue is incorporated by the endogenous enzymes into DNA. As the mechanisms for recognizing and removing the unusual residues do not prevent subsequent progress around the cell cycle, the now fluorescent DNA strands can be followed as they assemble into chromosomes, and segregate to daughters and granddaughters. Movies of such strands in living cells suggest that chromosome axes follow simple recognizable paths through their territories during G2 phase, and that late replicating regions maintain their relative positions as prophase chromosomes form. Quantitative analysis confirms that individual regions move little during this stage of chromosome condensation. As a result, the gross structure of an interphase chromosome territory is directly related to that of the prophase chromosome.
Key words: cell cycle; chromosome; DNA replication; fluorescein; microscopy ![]() |
Introduction |
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IN most somatic cells, individual chromosomes are only
visible for a short period of the cell cycle, from early
prophase to late telophase. During the greater part of
the cycle they are so decondensed that they cannot be resolved from each other. As a result, cytologists have only
been able to observe directly the movements of preformed
chromosomes. Little is known about the way the chromatin fiber is folded within the interphase nucleus, or how the
folding changes as chromosomes form (for reviews, see Manuelidis, 1985; Cook, 1995
; Nickerson et al., 1995
).
Nevertheless, the application of chromosome paints to
fixed cells shows that chromosomes occupy discrete territories during interphase (Cremer et al., 1993
; Trask et al.,
1993
).
Various approaches are being used to study chromosome and nuclear dynamics in living cells (Hiraoka et al.,
1989; Paddy et al., 1996
; Robinett et al., 1996
; Shelby et al.,
1996
; Straight et al., 1996
; Abney et al., 1997
; Marshall et
al., 1997
; Misteli et al., 1997
; Li et al., 1998
). One involves
microinjecting fluorescently tagged molecules into living
cells, and then observing how distributions change using
time-lapse fluorescence microscopy. For example, fluorescently tagged histones are incorporated into chromosomes, and this allows the structural changes in the chromatin fiber to be followed as chromosomes pass through
mitosis (Minden et al., 1989
). A variant involves injection
of tagged antibodies to mark structures like the nuclear
lamina (Paddy et al., 1996
). Another, and widely used, approach utilizes the green fluorescent protein (GFP)1 of the
jellyfish Aequorea victoria; a hybrid gene encoding a cellular protein fused to GFP is constructed and introduced
into a living cell, so that the expressed hybrid protein can
be localized by its fluorescence (Chalfie et al., 1994
). Examples include fusions between GFP and DNA-binding
proteins like repressors (Marshall et al., 1997
), CENP-B
(Shelby et al., 1996
), and histones (Kanda et al., 1998
). Hybrid proteins can be seen bound to their target sequences
in DNA. GFP is a large tag that might disrupt the function of an associated protein, especially if it is incorporated into a larger complex. Recently, a smaller tag, CCXXCC (X is
any amino acid) in an
helix, has been introduced (Griffin
et al., 1998
; Tsien and Miyawaki, 1998
). This short sequence is either embedded in a preexisting
helix in the
protein to be marked, or attached as an
-helical peptide
to either end. After expression of the appropriate construct, a bi-arsenical fluorescein derivative known as
FLASH (fluorescein arsenical helix binder) is bound to
the four cysteines in the
helix so that the modified protein becomes fluorescent. An additional approach involves
the direct visualization of DNA strands in living cells.
Cells are allowed to make DNA in the presence of a fluorescent precursor, so that individual DNA strands become
fluorescent (Zink et al., 1998
).
In all these approaches, living cells are illuminated with
high-intensity radiation. Unfortunately, high doses kill
cells, the UV wavelengths being especially toxic (Brakenhoff et al., 1996). Therefore, care must be taken to ensure
that cells remain viable during image collection. As a cell
may be biochemically alive (able to make DNA, or crawl
across the surface of a culture vessel), while being genetically dead (unable to divide indefinitely), we will define
life operationally as follows: cells able to pass through mitosis are considered to be alive, even though their potential to divide indefinitely remains untested.
We have developed a method for visualizing individual DNA strands in living cells, and we use it to monitor chromosome formation. Fluorescent analogues (fluorescein-dUTP, Bodipy-TR-dUTP, Cy5-dUTP) of the natural precursor, thymidine triphosphate, are introduced into cells; these are incorporated by endogenous enzymes into DNA. Surprisingly, the mechanisms for recognizing and repairing unnatural DNA residues do not prevent progress around the cell cycle. Therefore, the fluorescent strands can be followed by confocal microscopy as they assemble into chromosomes, and segregate to daughters and granddaughters. Movies of DNA strands in living cells suggest that chromosome axes follow simple, recognizable paths through interphase territories, with late replicating (heterochromatic) regions being so prealigned that they can readily form into a prophase chromosome.
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Materials and Methods |
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Cell Culture
Indian muntjac (DM) cells (Ryan and Johnson, 1996) were grown in
DME + 10% FCS (GIBCO BRL) and plated on glass-bottom microwell dishes coated with poly-D-lysine (Mattek). Cells were bead loaded using
100-µm glass beads (Sigma Chemical Co.) as described by McNeil (1989)
with 10 µl 0.1 mM Cy5-10-dUTP (made as described below), fluorescein-12-dUTP, or Bodipy-TR-14-dUTP (both from Molecular Probes, Inc.) in
L15 medium (GIBCO BRL). After loading, cells were grown in medium + 0.1 mM Trolox (a free-radical scavenger; Fluka AG) during
imaging. Cy5-10-dUTP was made (Yu et al., 1994
) by coupling 5-(3-aminoallyl)-2'-deoxyuridine-5'-phosphate (Sigma Chemical Co.) with Cy5
monofunctional dye (Nycomed Amersham). Cy5-10-dUTP is now supplied by Amersham. Unsynchronized cells were used for Figs. 1, E and F,
2, 3, and 5. For Fig. 1, E and F, cells were loaded with fluorescein-dUTP,
grown for 45 min in bromodeoxyuridine, fixed (10 min) in 4% paraformaldehyde, refixed (20 min) in 8% paraformaldehyde, and Br-DNA indirectly immunolabeled with Cy3 (Hozák et al., 1993
). For Fig. 2 A, cells
were loaded with a mixture of fluorescein-dUTP and Bodipy-TR-dUTP,
and grown for 4 h before the live cells were imaged. For Fig. 2 B, cells were loaded with fluorescein-dUTP, grown for 3 h, loaded with Bodipy-TR-dUTP, and grown for 4 h before imaging.
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S-phase cells were enriched to >90% for experiments in Figs. 1, A-D, and 4, B-D. Mitotic cells were collected by shake-off, grown for 13-15 h in 2.5 mM thymidine, washed, regrown for 2-4 h in 5 µM deoxycytidine to reverse the block, and loaded. G2 cells were enriched to >50% for the experiment in Fig. 4 A. Mitotic cells were grown for 8 h, loaded, grown for 5 h, regrown for 12 h in thymidine, washed, and regrown for 11 h in deoxycytidine.
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Microscopy and Image Collection
Phase-contrast images were captured with a Hamamatsu CCD attached to a Nikon Diaphot-200 microscope, fitted with a heated (Bioptech) 60× PlanApo objective and stage (Zeiss). The stage was surrounded by an insulated box. Stacks of green, red, or far-red confocal images were collected using a Bio-Rad MRC1024 (12 single scans of 170 pixels square, axial steps of 0.5 µm for interphase, and 1 µm for mitotic nuclei). Cy5 was generally used for live cell work using a 647-nm excitation beam, an intensity of 50 nW (<1/100 intensity commonly used with fixed cells), and an open pinhole. Note that doubling the excitation intensity often slowed progression around the cycle. The bottom four to six sections from each stack were projected onto a plane, converted to 510 pixels square, and contrast-stretched to fill the 256-level gray scale, the same settings were used for all images of one movie. Finally, noise was reduced by Gaussian filtering using Adobe Photoshop. For Fig. 5, positions of 48 foci were located manually using SIS EasiVision software, and exported into Excel. Images were aligned first by superimposing centers of gravity of 48 foci, and then by rotation (using a least-squares fit). Time series were displayed using Confocal Assistant (T.C. Brelje). The inaccuracy of position measurement, due to instrument movement, noise, and positioning focal centers, was determined as 0.1 µm by measuring and remeasuring the positions of foci in fixed cells under identical conditions. The length of mitotic chromosomes in two living cells (loaded with fluorescein-dUTP in early S phase) was determined using positions obtained from stacks of 37 and 66 sections.
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Results |
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Visualizing Sites of DNA Synthesis in Living Cells
Fig. 1 illustrates the approach applied to Indian muntjac
cells (Ryan and Johnson, 1996). These cells were chosen
because they have only nine chromosomes, which facilitates analysis. They also grow rapidly with a doubling time
of ~18 h. At time zero, Cy5-dUTP was introduced into
S-phase cells by bead-loading (McNeil, 1989
). Addition of
glass beads transiently permeabilizes the plasma membrane, allowing the analogue to enter. The petri dish containing living cells was placed on the heated stage of a microscope equipped with both phase-contrast and confocal
fluorescence optics. Within 6 min, most of the precursor
has been transported into the nucleus (Fig. 1 B), where it
becomes concentrated in discrete nuclear foci (Fig. 1 C).
These foci result because active DNA polymerases are
concentrated at this stage of the cell cycle in discrete factories which duplicate the genome (Nakamura et al., 1986
;
Hozák et al., 1993
). Essentially all analogue is incorporated into DNA in <30 min, so only DNA made in this
short period fluoresces. Therefore, roughly the same pattern of foci is seen after 90 min (Fig. 1 D).
Various features indicate that these foci result from
S-phase synthesis. First, they have diagnostic patterns,
both in interphase and mitosis (Nakamura et al., 1986; Nakayasu and Berezney, 1989
; Manders et al., 1992
, 1996
;
O'Keefe et al., 1992
). After loading in G1 phase, nuclear
foci only appear when S phase is reached, then, they have
the pattern typical of early-S phase (not shown). If Cy5-dUTP, or another analogue, fluorescein-dUTP, is loaded late during S phase, foci appear immediately, arranged in
the pattern typical of this stage (Fig. 1 E). Second, fluorescein-dUTP is incorporated into the same foci as bromodeoxyuridine (Br-dU), a precursor routinely used to mark
sites of S-phase replication (Fig. 1 F). Third, these patterns
are different from those due to nucleotide-excision repair,
which takes place in thousands of tiny foci in all cells in the
population (Jackson et al., 1994
). Fourth, unincorporated
analogues can be extracted with 0.1% Triton X-100, and
the nuclear foci by an additional treatment with DNase (0.5 U/ml, 10 min, 20°C, not shown).
Labeling Regions That Replicate at Different Times
Regions replicating at different times during S phase can
be labeled after successive loadings with fluorescein-dUTP and Bodipy-TR-dUTP. For example, simultaneous
loading with both precursors yields yellow foci (Fig. 2 A),
as the two labels become intermingled in DNA. However,
loading one followed by the other 3 h later yields discrete
green or red foci (Fig. 2 B), as the two labels are incorporated into different parts of the genome. These results confirm others obtained earlier with fixed cells (Manders et al.,
1996).
Cy5-DNA Strands in Diploid Cells Segregate Normally
All cells, including the line of muntjac cells used here
(Pillidge et al., 1986), possess sophisticated mechanisms
for repairing DNA damage (Friedberg, 1985
). These
might be expected to recognize fluorescent adducts, and to
arrest the cell cycle at checkpoints in S and G2 phases.
Laser illumination would also be expected to generate
additional damage (Brakenhoff et al., 1996
) that would compound the arrest. Only when most adducts and any
light-induced damage had been removed did we expect
the nonfluorescent cells to pass through mitosis. Surprisingly, muntjac cells containing Cy5-DNA divided normally
(see below). As these cells have been grown continuously
in culture for many generations and might have accumulated mutations in the repair pathway, we also investigated whether diploid cells behaved similarly. Therefore, a secondary culture of human fibroblasts which had been
grown for only 15 passages was loaded with Cy5-dUTP,
and the cells regrown for 30 h. Imaging then showed that
the fluorescent DNA was divided among daughters, which
were easily recognized because they shared similar fluorescent patterns (Fig. 3, A and B, arrows). All cells containing Cy5-DNA tested to date (muntjac cells, diploid
human cells, HeLa cells) proved equally sensitive to illumination (not shown), although we have not yet examined
this systematically. Cy5-DNA is detected after illumination with laser light of 647 nm, and, as expected, use of
shorter wavelengths (568 nm for Bodipy-Texas red-DNA,
and 488 nm for fluorescein-DNA) proved more toxic (not
shown). We have not yet examined this systematically.
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Passage through Mitosis
Unfortunately, high doses of illumination did prevent passage through mitosis (not shown). Therefore, we could only make movies of dividing cells using low exposures, with consequent reduction in image quality and length. Fig. 4 illustrates movies of four different muntjac cells as they traverse different parts of the cell cycle. Each movie also contains a set of phase-contrast images, although none are shown in Fig. 4, B-D. Note that each fluorescent image shown is derived from a complete stack of 12 images, so that three-dimensional information is also available.
Fig. 4 A illustrates passage through mitosis. The cell was loaded with Cy5-dUTP during S phase so that late replicating DNA became fluorescent. Then, the cell was allowed to divide once (to confirm that it was well) before a stack of 12 optical sections was collected as one daughter was about to enter mitosis again (28:00 h after loading). Inspection of this stack gives a three-dimensional view of foci arranged in a pattern typical of late-S phase. Projecting the 12 images onto one plane gives a complex pattern that is difficult to analyze, so a simplified projection of only the bottom four sections is shown as the first frame in Fig. 4 A. As most late-S phase foci are peripheral, ~50% foci are seen. Other projections were made similarly, as the daughter passed from G2 phase (28:01), through mitosis (28:22-28:40), to give two granddaughters (only one is shown after 31:35).
Fig. 4, B and C, illustrates entry into and out of mitosis in more detail. In Fig. 4 B, the cell was loaded early in S phase, so the pattern of fluorescent foci is more complex than in Fig. 4 A. The movie begins 7 h later when the cell has reached the end of G2 phase, and during filming the cell crawls to the right; by the last frame the cell is in mitosis. Between 7:35 and 7:45 h after loading, phase-contrast shows that the nuclear membrane breaks down; however, the fluorescent images reveal that chromosomes form earlier. Individual foci (three bright foci in the middle) can be traced throughout the movie. Surprisingly, their position changes little relative to neighboring foci, even when chromosomes are forming. In Fig. 4 C, the cell was loaded early during S phase, to give many foci. By 9:00 h, it has reached mitosis, and chromosomes reorient extensively on the metaphase plate (9:07-9:28), before segregating (9:44). By 10:00 h, nuclear membranes reform as chromosomes decondense, nuclei flatten (10:22), and the bottom daughter continues to grow (10:11-21:00).
Inspection of many movies, like those shown in Fig. 4,
underlies our operational definition of when a cell should
be considered alive. For example, cells are often able to
crawl across the surface of the culture dish without being
alive enough to pass through mitosis (not shown). Similarly, they may contain individual foci that move considerably relative to neighboring foci, even though they cannot
form those foci into recognizable mitotic chromosomes (not shown). However, we find that if a cell is able to
transform its interphase nucleus into visible chromosomes,
it is usually able to segregate those chromosomes to two
daughter cells. This is in accord with earlier results showing that chromosomes, once formed, become inert passengers during mitosis, as they can even be substituted or removed (Heald et al., 1996; Zhang and Nicklas, 1996
).
The Segregation of Individual DNA Strands to Daughters and Granddaughters
Individual DNA strands can also be followed as they segregate to great-granddaughters. In Fig. 4 D, the parent cell
was loaded early during S phase, grown for 6:00 h, and
photographed. It was then allowed to divide to give
daughters (26:00) and granddaughters (54:00). As a result
of semiconservative replication and random segregation,
~50% of the chromosomes in a granddaughter contain a fluorescent strand. During interphase, these are seen as
fluorescent domains against a dark background (54:00).
Fluorescent domains condense into fluorescent chromosomes (54:25), dark domains into dark chromosomes (54:
36). After aligning on the metaphase plate (54:43), fluorescent chromosomes (and other dark chromosomes) segregate to each of the two great-granddaughters (54:48-55:
40). If Cy5-DNA strands obey the rules of semiconservative replication and random chromosome segregation, we
would expect two to three of the nine chromosomes great-granddaughters receive to be fluorescent, as is the case.
Eventually descendants with only one fluorescent chromosome are born, and subsequently this chromosome is inherited unilinearly (not shown; see Jackson and Pombo,
1998; Zink et al., 1998
).
The Dynamics of Chromosome Formation: Similarity of Interphase and Prometaphase Architectures
Because information on how chromosomes form is limited, we analyzed the transition from mid-G2 phase to
early prophase in one cell in detail (Fig. 5). The cell was
loaded late in S phase and filmed as it progressed from G2
phase into prophase. We collected 21 phase-contrast images (first and last are shown in Fig. 5, A and C) and 252 fluorescence images (21 complete stacks of 12 confocal
sections through the cell) of the living cell. The phase-contrast images allowed us to monitor breakdown of the nuclear membrane and chromosome formation, while the
fluorescence images provided three-dimensional information on the distribution and movement of (heterochromatic) DNA replicated late in S phase. To simplify the fluorescence images for presentational purposes, the bottom four to six sections in each of the 21 stacks were projected
onto a plane (first and last are shown in Fig. 5, B and D).
After collecting the last stack of images, the cell was fixed
and total DNA stained, enabling individual prophase
chromosomes to be identified (Fig. 5 E). A final stack of
12 images was also collected to reveal the distribution of
the fluorescent foci in the fixed cell. During filming, the
cell crawled 20 µm across the field, as the nucleus rotated
±20° around the z axis, such translation and rotation are
common (Park and De Boni, 1991). A film incorporating corrections for these global cellular movements can
be viewed on http://www.path.ox.ac.uk/prc/images/emm/emmov.htm. It contains 21 frames, each showing fluorescent foci in the bottom half of the cell.
After inspection of the complete set of three-dimensional fluorescence images, we identified 48 foci that could be tracked unambiguously from the first (interphase) image to their final positions in a chromosome. Others that could not be tracked unambiguously (mainly because they fused and/or split) were not analyzed further. Simplified tracks have been superimposed on the final image of the fixed and stained cell to illustrate the movement of the selected foci, with tracks of the same color marking foci from the same chromosomal segment (Fig. 5 E). Note that it is sometimes difficult to trace some of the selected foci unambiguously from frame to frame in the movie, which contains only two-dimensional information.
Quantitative analysis of the movie indicates that a typical focus tracks ~2 µm from first to last frame (after correction for cellular movements). The rate of movement progressively increases from 0.2 µm/h in mid-G2 phase, reaching 0.8 µm/h when the nuclear envelope breaks down, and 2.5 µm/h during the final leg. Foci in one segment often move together (segment 1 foci in Fig. 5 E all track south-west), sometimes sliding past adjacent segments moving in a different direction (e.g., foci in segments 2 and 3). This movement could result indirectly from cellular movement, as individual chromosomal segments are elastically deformed by external forces. It also occurs in dead cells that have been exposed to so much illumination that they cannot enter prophase (not shown). The net result of such movement is an average translocation of the center of mass of foci in a typical segment by 0.7 µm (range 0.2-1.6 µm). As a segment moves, individual foci move within that segment. The net movement of foci is 0.8 µm (range 0.7-0.9 µm) relative to the center of mass of the segment.
Foci could have been distributed randomly in a domain to move to their appropriate places in the chromosome (as in Fig. 6 A). However, our results suggest foci are so prealigned that only subtle movements are required to generate recognizable chromosomes (as in Fig. 6 B). These subtle movements are reflected by the shortening of axis 1 (defined in Fig. 5 F) by 12% from first to last frame. Once formed, a prophase chromosome roughly halves its end-to-end length to give a metaphase chromosome (axis 2 in Fig. 5 F halves). We believe the results obtained with this cell are representative, because similar chromosome dynamics were seen in five others that were treated similarly. Moreover, another 10 cells, which were not fixed at the end of the experiment, were seen to pass through mitosis after exposure to similar levels of illumination.
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Discussion |
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Imaging Sites of DNA Synthesis and Individual DNA Strands in Living Cells
We describe a method that allows sites of DNA synthesis,
and individual DNA strands, to be imaged directly in living cells. Fluorescent analogues (fluorescein-dUTP, Bodipy-TR-dUTP, Cy5-dUTP) of the natural precursor, thymidine triphosphate, are introduced into cells. Analogues
are incorporated by endogenous enzymes into DNA so
that it becomes fluorescent. Active DNA polymerases are concentrated in discrete factories (Nakamura et al., 1986;
Hozák et al., 1993
), and as the fluorescent precursor is exhausted, the newly made (fluorescent) DNA becomes locally concentrated in discrete foci (Fig. 1). These foci persist for many generations (Fig. 4 D; see also Jackson and
Pombo, 1998
; Zink et al., 1998
). Surprisingly, attaching
fluorescent tags to DNA has remarkably little effect on
growth; the mechanisms for recognizing and repairing such unnatural DNA residues do not prevent subsequent
progress around the cell cycle. Therefore, the fluorescent
DNA can be imaged in the light microscope. This enabled
us to use a confocal microscope to collect images of DNA
strands as they condensed into chromosomes and segregated to daughters and granddaughters (Fig. 4). These cells remain both biochemically and genetically alive during imaging, as they can make DNA and pass through mitosis.
Unfortunately, the quality and length of such movies is
limited by the effects of the laser light used to excite fluorescence. These effects include a lengthening of the cell cycle, delayed segregation, and the induction of strand exchanges which leads to the generation of subchromosomal
domains in great-granddaughters and their descendants
(not shown). Irradiation with high doses generally arrested
cells in G2 phase, presumably at the major checkpoint
(Elledge, 1996). If cells passed this checkpoint, they generally divided (not shown). As expected (de With and Greulich, 1995
; Leavitt et al., 1997
), illuminating Cy5-DNA
with far-red light of 647 nm proved less toxic than the use
of fluorescein or Bodipy-TR and shorter wavelengths (488 and 568 nm, respectively). Although Bodipy-TR-dUTP
and fluorescein-dUTP were incorporated into DNA, and
the resulting fluorescent DNA strands segregated to daughters, we generally used Cy5-dUTP when following chromosomes through mitosis. We also had to use a low intensity of the laser (5 nW measured at the position of the
specimen). In practice, the length of each movie represents a compromise between minimizing exposure (to reduce toxicity) and maximizing the intensity (to increase
resolution within individual frames and the total number of frames). Even so, we were able to collect >240 images
of one cell (20 sets of 12 images in a confocal stack were
collected for Fig. 5), sufficient to provide four-dimensional information.
Inspection of the movies directly confirms important
conclusions inferred earlier using indirect approaches.
First, they confirm that the replication foci or factories
seen in fixed or permeabilized cells (Nakamura et al.,
1986; Nakayasu and Berezney, 1989
; Manders et al., 1992
,
1996
; O'Keefe et al., 1992
; Hassan and Cook, 1993
) have
their counterparts in vivo, and are not preparative artifacts. Second, DNA foci move little during interphase
compared with the rapid movements of mitosis (compare
the first 15-16 min in Fig. 4, B and C). These interphase
movements are within the range seen by others (Shelby
et al., 1996
; Abney et al., 1997
; Marshall et al., 1997
; Zink
et al., 1998
). Third, individual chromosomal territories seen in granddaughters and great-granddaughters are compact (Fig. 4 D, 54:25), again in agreement with earlier findings (Cremer et al., 1993
; Robinett et al., 1996
; Zink et al.,
1998
). Fourth, characteristic distributions of foci are inherited through interphase and mitosis. Thus, in Fig. 4 D, a
distinctive pattern (many small foci spread throughout the
nucleoplasm) is established early in S phase, and is passed
to daughters (26:00) and the appropriate chromosomal domains in granddaughters (55:40). In Fig. 4 A, a different
(late replication) pattern is passed down the generations. This suggests that whatever underlying structure maintains the distinctive pattern, the structure can either pass
through mitosis intact, or, if disassembled, can reform accurately afterwards (see also Jackson and Pombo, 1998
;
Zink et al., 1998
). Fifth, Cy5-DNA strands obey the rules
of semiconservative replication and random chromosome
segregation. For example, two to three of the nine chromosomes a great-granddaughter receives would be expected to be fluorescent, as in Fig. 4 D.
Chromosome Formation
We also used this method to visualize DNA strands during the critical phase of the cell cycle when interphase chromatin fiber forms into a recognizable chromosome (Fig. 5). This phase was inaccessible to classical cytologists, as individual fibers in the interphase nucleus cannot be resolved. Cells were loaded with Cy5-dUTP late in S phase so that heterochromatic foci became labeled. We expected all the foci on one chromosome to be distributed randomly throughout that chromosome's territory, and those foci to move to their appropriate places in the chromosome (as in Fig. 6 A). However, our results suggest the foci are so prealigned that only subtle movements are required to generate recognizable chromosomes (as in Fig. 6 B). They show that axis 2 (defined in Fig. 5 F) shortens little as the chromosome forms. Most shortening (and considerable movement) occurs after prometaphase, during the stages visible to classical cytologists. It remains to be seen to what extent early replicating foci, which are arranged in complex patterns difficult to analyze, are similarly prealigned during interphase. Just as identifiable chromosomes form without much movement, they disappear after mitosis without much movement (Fig. 4 C), although we have not yet analyzed this in detail.
These results, and those obtained earlier (Hiraoka et al.,
1989), are consistent with the model illustrated in Fig. 6
B. Here, late replicating (heterochromatic) foci are prealigned during interphase. They are also relatively immobile, perhaps because they are attached to the lamina.
Much of their movement seems to result indirectly from
cellular movement, as individual chromosomal segments
are elastically deformed as the cell crawls across the surface of the culture vessel. On entry into prophase, it is easy to imagine that these (fixed) heterochromatic foci nucleate the condensation of neighboring euchromatin. Once
the lamina has dispersed, the foci become free to collapse
both laterally and axially into the mitotic chromosome.
Rapid chromosome movements of mitosis occur, and sister chromatids separate. After segregation to daughters, the (heterochromatic) foci could now nucleate lamina reassembly, so that they become fixed in new positions.
They can now remain in those positions as the euchromatin decondenses to form a G1 domain. It remains to be established what path the chromatin fiber follows within
such a domain, and how much individual foci move during
the rest of interphase (see Manuelidis 1985
; Cook 1995
; Nickerson et al. 1995
for reviews of domain organization;
and Li et al. 1998
for analysis of the movement of one gene
locus). Nevertheless, our results suggest the architecture
of the G2 nucleus is directly related to that of the prophase chromosome.
Future Prospects
This approach can be extended to follow early, mid, and
late replicating regions in one cell (e.g., after loading successively fluorescein-dUTP, Bodipy-TR-dUTP, and Cy5-dUTP; not shown). We also anticipate that further technical advances in imaging (for example, the use of two-photon excitation; Denk et al., 1990; Brakenhoff et al.,
1996
) should facilitate the production of longer movies
with higher resolution. This method also opens up the
prospect of using fluorescence resonance energy transfer
(Selvin, 1995
) to monitor the docking onto DNA of DNA-binding proteins tagged with GFP or FLASH.
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Footnotes |
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Address correspondence to Peter R. Cook, Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3RE, UK. Tel.: (44) 1865-275-528. Fax: (44) 1865-275-515. E-mail: peter. cook{at}path.ox.ac.uk
Received for publication 30 September 1998 and in revised form 15 January 1999.
Erik M.M. Manders' current address is E.C. Slater Instituut, University of
Amsterdam, Plantage Muidergracht 12, 1018 TV Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
This work was supported by the Training and Mobility of Researchers program (European Union), the Human Frontier Science Program, and The Wellcome Trust.
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Abbreviations used in this paper |
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FLASH, fluorescein arsenical helix binder; GFP, green fluorescent protein.
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