Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
The collective action of dynein, kinesin and myosin molecular motors is responsible
for the intracellular active transport of cargoes, vesicles and organelles along the semi-flexible
oriented filaments of the cytoskeleton. The overall mobility of the cargoes upon binding and
unbinding to motor proteins can be modeled as an intermittency between Brownian diffusion in
the cell cytoplasm and active ballistic excursions along actin filaments or microtubules. Such an
intermittent intracellular active transport, exhibited by star-shaped gold nanoparticles (GNSs, Gold
Nanostars) upon internalization in HeLa cancer cells, is investigated here by combining live-cell
time-lapse confocal reflectance microscopy and the spatio-temporal correlation, in the reciprocal
Fourier space, of the acquired image sequences. At first, the analytical theoretical framework for the
investigation of a two-state intermittent dynamics is presented for Fourier-space Image Correlation
Spectroscopy (kICS). Then simulated kICS correlation functions are employed to evaluate the
influence of, and sensitivity to, all the kinetic and dynamic parameters the model involves (the
transition rates between the diffusive and the active transport states, the diffusion coefficient and
drift velocity of the imaged particles). The optimal procedure for the analysis of the experimental
data is outlined and finally exploited to derive whole-cell maps for the parameters underlying the
GNSs super-diffusive dynamics. Applied here to the GNSs subcellular trafficking, the proposed
kICS analysis can be adopted for the characterization of the intracellular (super-) diffusive dynamics
of any fluorescent or scattering biological macromolecule.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Analysis and statistical methods; Image reconstruction in medical imaging; gold nanostars
Elenco autori:
Bouzin, M.; Sironi, L.; Chirico, G.; D'Alfonso, L.; Inverso, D.; Pallavicini, Piersandro; Collini, M.
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