GPCR Signaling Measurement and Drug Profiling with an Automated Live-Cell Microscopy System.
Eric GreenwaldClara PosnerAnanya BharathAnne LyonsCristina SalmerónKrishna SriramShu Z WileyPaul A InselJin ZhangPublished in: ACS sensors (2023)
A major limitation of time-lapse microscopy combined with fluorescent biosensors, a powerful tool for quantifying spatiotemporal dynamics of signaling in single living cells, is low-experimental throughput. To overcome this limitation, we created a highly customizable, MATLAB-based platform: flexible automated liquid-handling combined microscope (FALCOscope) that coordinates an OpenTrons liquid handler and a fluorescence microscope to automate drug treatments, fluorescence imaging, and single-cell analysis. To test the feasibility of the FALCOscope, we quantified G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR)-stimulated Protein Kinase A activity and cAMP responses to GPCR agonists and antagonists. We also characterized cAMP dynamics induced by GPR68/OGR1, a proton-sensing GPCR, in response to variable extracellular pH values. GPR68-induced cAMP responses were more transient in acidic than neutral pH values, suggesting a pH-dependence for signal attenuation. Ogerin, a GPR68 positive allosteric modulator, enhanced cAMP response most strongly at pH 7.0 and sustained cAMP response for acidic pH values, thereby demonstrating the capability of the FALCOscope to capture allosteric modulation. At a high concentration, ogerin increased cAMP signaling independent of GPR68, likely via phosphodiesterase inhibition. The FALCOscope system thus enables enhanced throughput single-cell dynamic measurements and is a versatile system for interrogating spatiotemporal regulation of signaling molecules in living cells and for drug profiling and screening.
Keyphrases
- living cells
- single molecule
- single cell
- protein kinase
- fluorescent probe
- high throughput
- binding protein
- fluorescence imaging
- rna seq
- ionic liquid
- fatty acid
- small molecule
- high resolution
- drug induced
- mass spectrometry
- high speed
- machine learning
- optical coherence tomography
- adverse drug
- blood brain barrier
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- brain injury
- high glucose
- electronic health record