posted on 2013-11-13, 00:00authored byL. Bonnemay, S. Hostachy, C. Hoffmann, J. Gautier, Z. Gueroui
Intracellular
biochemical reactions are often localized in space
and time, inducing gradients of enzymatic activity that may play decisive
roles in determining cell’s fate and functions. However, the
techniques available to examine such enzymatic gradients of activity
remain limited. Here, we propose a new method to engineer a spatial
gradient of signaling protein concentration within Xenopus egg extracts using superparamagnetic nanoparticles. We show that,
upon the application of a magnetic field, a concentration gradient
of nanoparticles with a tunable length extension is established within
confined egg extracts. We then conjugate the nanoparticles to RanGTP,
a small G-protein controlling microtubule assembly. We found that
the generation of an artificial gradient of Ran-nanoparticles modifies
the spatial positioning of microtubule assemblies. Furthermore, the
spatial control of the level of Ran concentration allows us to correlate
the local fold increase in Ran-nanoparticle concentration with the
spatial positioning of the microtubule-asters. Our assay provides
a bottom-up approach to examine the minimum ingredients generating
polarization and symmetry breaking within cells. More generally, these
results show how magnetic nanoparticles and magnetogenetic tools can
be used to control the spatiotemporal dynamics of signaling pathways.