Single-Janus Rod Tracking Reveals the “Rock-and-Roll”
of Endosomes in Living Cells
Posted on 2017-09-25 - 00:00
Endosomes in cells
are known to move directionally along microtubules,
but their rotational dynamics have rarely been investigated. Even
less is known, specifically, about the rotation of nonspherical endosomes.
Here we report a single-Janus rod rotational tracking study to reveal
the rich rotational dynamics of rod-shaped endosomes in living cells.
The rotational reporters were Janus rods that display patches of different
fluorescent colors on opposite sides along their long axes. When the
Janus rods are wrapped tightly inside endosomes, their shape and optical
anisotropy allow the simultaneous measurements of all three rotational
angles (in-plane, out-of-plane, and longitudinal) and the translational
motion of single endosomes with high spatiotemporal resolutions. We
demonstrate that endosomes undergo in-plane rotation and rolling during
intracellular transport and that such rotational dynamics are driven
by rapid microtubule fluctuations. We reveal for the first time the
“rock-and-roll” of endosomes in living cells and how
the intracellular environment modifies such rotational dynamics. This
study demonstrates a unique application of Janus particles as imaging
probes in the elucidation of fundamental biological questions.
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Gao, Yuan; Anthony, Stephen M.; Yi, Yi; Li, Wenqian; Yu, Yanqi; Yu, Yan (2017). Single-Janus Rod Tracking Reveals the “Rock-and-Roll”
of Endosomes in Living Cells. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b02804