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"Jin, Minjun"
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Spatial heterogeneity accelerates phase-to-trigger wave transitions in frog egg extracts
2024
Cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) activity rises and falls throughout the cell cycle: a cell-autonomous process called mitotic oscillations. Mitotic oscillators can synchronize when spatially coupled, facilitating rapid, synchronous divisions in large early embryos of
Drosophila
(~0.5 mm) and
Xenopus
(~1.2 mm). Diffusion alone cannot achieve such long-range coordination. Instead, studies proposed mitotic waves—phase and trigger waves—as mechanisms of the coordination. How waves establish over time remains unclear. Using
Xenopus laevis
egg extracts and a Cdk1 Förster resonance energy transfer sensor, we observe a transition from phase to trigger wave dynamics in initially homogeneous cytosol. Spatial heterogeneity promotes this transition. Adding nuclei accelerates entrainment. The system transitions almost immediately when driven by metaphase-arrested extracts. Numerical simulations suggest phase waves appear transiently as trigger waves take time to entrain the system. Therefore, we show that both waves belong to a single biological process capable of coordinating the cell cycle over long distances.
Using Xenopus laevis egg extracts and a Cdk1 FRET sensor, the authors demonstrate how rapid cell cycles achieve long-range cytoplasmic synchronization through mitotic waves. In this process, trigger waves gradually replace transient phase waves, with spatial heterogeneities accelerating the transition.
Journal Article
Coordinated cellular behavior regulated by epinephrine neurotransmitters in the nerveless placozoa
2024
Understanding how cells communicated before the evolution of nervous systems in early metazoans is key to unraveling the origins of multicellular life. We focused on
Trichoplax adhaerens
, one of the earliest multicellular animals, to explore this question. Through screening a small compound library targeting G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), we found that
Trichoplax
exhibits distinctive rotational movements when exposed to epinephrine. Further studies suggested that, akin to those in humans, this basal organism also utilizes adrenergic signals to regulate its negative taxis behavior, with the downstream signaling pathway being more straightforward and efficient. Mechanistically, the binding of ligands activates downstream calcium signaling, subsequently modulating ciliary redox signals. This process ultimately regulates the beating direction of cilia, governing the coordinated movement of the organism. Our findings not only highlight the enduring presence of adrenergic signaling in stress responses during evolution but also underscore the importance of early metazoan expansion of GPCR families. This amplification empowers us with the ability to sense external cues and modulate cellular communication effectively.
Basal multicellular animals are capable of coordinated movement despite the absence of an organize nervous system, though it remains unclear how cells communicate in these organisms. Here they use the placozoa
Trichoplax
to screen for active signaling molecules, and find that epinephrine can induce coordinated movement in these animals.
Journal Article
Ciliary length regulation by intraflagellar transport in zebrafish
by
Jin, Minjun
,
Chen, Zhe
,
Xie, Haibo
in
Animals
,
Animals, Genetically Modified
,
Biological Transport
2024
How cells regulate the size of their organelles remains a fundamental question in cell biology. Cilia, with their simple structure and surface localization, provide an ideal model for investigating organelle size control. However, most studies on cilia length regulation are primarily performed on several single-celled organisms. In contrast, the mechanism of length regulation in cilia across diverse cell types within multicellular organisms remains a mystery. Similar to humans, zebrafish contain diverse types of cilia with variable lengths. Taking advantage of the transparency of zebrafish embryos, we conducted a comprehensive investigation into intraflagellar transport (IFT), an essential process for ciliogenesis. By generating a transgenic line carrying Ift88-GFP transgene, we observed IFT in multiple types of cilia with varying lengths. Remarkably, cilia exhibited variable IFT speeds in different cell types, with longer cilia exhibiting faster IFT speeds. This increased IFT speed in longer cilia is likely not due to changes in common factors that regulate IFT, such as motor selection, BBSome proteins, or tubulin modification. Interestingly, longer cilia in the ear cristae tend to form larger IFT compared to shorter spinal cord cilia. Reducing the size of IFT particles by knocking down Ift88 slowed IFT speed and resulted in the formation of shorter cilia. Our study proposes an intriguing model of cilia length regulation via controlling IFT speed through the modulation of the size of the IFT complex. This discovery may provide further insights into our understanding of how organelle size is regulated in higher vertebrates.
Journal Article
A robust and tunable mitotic oscillator in artificial cells
by
Yang, Qiong
,
Liu, Xuwen
,
Li, Zhengda
in
artifical mitotic cells
,
Biochemistry and Chemical Biology
,
Cell cycle
2018
Single-cell analysis is pivotal to deciphering complex phenomena like heterogeneity, bistability, and asynchronous oscillations, where a population ensemble cannot represent individual behaviors. Bulk cell-free systems, despite having unique advantages of manipulation and characterization of biochemical networks, lack the essential single-cell information to understand a class of out-of-steady-state dynamics including cell cycles. Here, by encapsulating Xenopus egg extracts in water-in-oil microemulsions, we developed artificial cells that are adjustable in sizes and periods, sustain mitotic oscillations for over 30 cycles, and function in forms from the simplest cytoplasmic-only to the more complicated ones involving nuclear dynamics, mimicking real cells. Such innate flexibility and robustness make it key to studying clock properties like tunability and stochasticity. Our results also highlight energy as an important regulator of cell cycles. We demonstrate a simple, powerful, and likely generalizable strategy of integrating strengths of single-cell approaches into conventional in vitro systems to study complex clock functions.
Journal Article
Disrupted intraflagellar transport due to IFT74 variants causes Joubert syndrome
by
Lin, Zaisheng
,
Luo, Guanjun
,
Gao, Huafang
in
Abnormalities, Multiple - genetics
,
Animals
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2021
Ciliopathies are a group of disorders caused by defects of the cilia. Joubert syndrome (JBTS) is a recessive and pleiotropic ciliopathy that causes cerebellar vermis hypoplasia and psychomotor delay. Although the intraflagellar transport (IFT) complex serves as a key module to maintain the ciliary structure and regulate ciliary signaling, the function of IFT in JBTS remains largely unknown. We aimed to explore the impact of IFT dysfunction in JBTS.
Exome sequencing was performed to screen for pathogenic variants in IFT genes in a JBTS cohort. Animal model and patient-derived fibroblasts were used to evaluate the pathogenic effects of the variants.
We identified IFT74 as a JBTS-associated gene in three unrelated families. All the affected individuals carried truncated variants and shared one missense variant (p.Q179E) found only in East Asians. The expression of the human p.Q179E-IFT74 variant displayed compromised rescue effects in zebrafish ift74 morphants. Attenuated ciliogenesis; altered distribution of IFT proteins and ciliary membrane proteins, including ARL13B, INPP5E, and GPR161; and disrupted hedgehog signaling were observed in patient fibroblasts with IFT74 variants.
IFT74 is identified as a JBTS-related gene. Cellular and biochemical mechanisms are also provided.
[Display omitted]
Journal Article
Similarity analysis of dynamic temperature measurements
2022
Different temperature sensors show different measurement values when excited by the same dynamic temperature source. Therefore, a method is needed to determine the difference between dynamic temperature measurements. This paper proposes a novelty approach to treating dynamic temperature measurements over a period of time as a temperature time series, and derives the formula for the distance between the measurement values using uniformsampling within the time series analysis. The similarity is defined in terms of distance to measure the difference. The distance measures were studied on the analog measurement datasets. The results show that the discrete Fréchet distance has stronger robustness and higher sensitivity. The two methods have also been applied to an experimental dataset. The experimental results also confirm that the discrete Fréchet distance performs better.
Journal Article
In vitro cell cycle oscillations exhibit a robust and hysteretic response to changes in cytoplasmic density
2022
Cells control the properties of the cytoplasm to ensure proper functioning of biochemical processes. Recent studies showed that cytoplasmic density varies in both physiological and pathological states of cells undergoing growth, division, differentiation, apoptosis, senescence, and metabolic starvation. Little is known about how cellular processes cope with these cytoplasmic variations. Here, we study how a cell cycle oscillator comprising cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk1) responds to changes in cytoplasmic density by systematically diluting or concentrating cycling Xenopus egg extracts in cell-like microfluidic droplets. We found that the cell cycle maintains robust oscillations over a wide range of deviations from the endogenous density: as low as 0.2× to more than 1.22× relative cytoplasmic density (RCD). A further dilution or concentration from these values arrested the system in a low or high steady state of Cdk1 activity, respectively. Interestingly, diluting an arrested cytoplasm of 1.22× RCD recovers oscillations at lower than 1× RCD. Thus, the cell cycle switches reversibly between oscillatory and stable steady states at distinct thresholds depending on the direction of tuning, forming a hysteresis loop.We propose a mathematical model which recapitulates these observations and predicts that the Cdk1/Wee1/Cdc25 positive feedback loops do not contribute to the observed robustness, supported by experiments. Our system can be applied to study how cytoplasmic density affects other cellular processes.
Journal Article
Wnt signaling patterns a central–peripheral body axis in the early-diverging metazoan Trichoplax adhaerens
2026
Abstract
Body axis formation was a pivotal innovation in animal evolution, providing the spatial framework necessary for organized multicellularity. While the genetic basis of axis specification is well established in bilaterians, how axial organization emerged in early-diverging metazoans remains unresolved. Here, we address this question in Trichoplax adhaerens, a placozoan representing one of the simplest extant animal body plans. We show that Wnt signaling, a conserved regulator of axial patterning, exhibits polarized expression enriched in the peripheral region of this morphologically simple organism. Functional perturbations demonstrate that Wnt activity promotes peripheral cell proliferation and maintains central–peripheral tissue balance. Transcriptomic profiling further reveals distinct molecular identities along this axis, resembling the oral–aboral polarity of cnidarians. Together, our findings uncover a Wnt-dependent axial system in placozoans and support the view that core components of metazoan body axis patterning were already established in early animal evolution.
Journal Article
Ciliary length regulation by intraflagellar transport in zebrafish
2024
How cells regulate the size of their organelles remains a fundamental question in cell biology. Cilia, with their simple structure and surface localization, provide an ideal model for investigating organelle size control. However, most studies on cilia length regulation are primarily performed on several single-celled organisms. In contrast, the mechanism of length regulation in cilia across diverse cell types within multicellular organisms remains a mystery. Similar to humans, zebrafish contain diverse types of cilia with variable lengths. Taking advantage of the transparency of zebrafish embryos, we conducted a comprehensive investigation into intraflagellar transport (IFT), an essential process for ciliogenesis. By generating a transgenic line carrying Ift88-GFP transgene, we observed IFT in multiple types of cilia with varying lengths. Remarkably, cilia exhibited variable IFT speeds in different cell types, with longer cilia exhibiting faster IFT speeds. This increased IFT speed in longer cilia is likely not due to changes in common factors that regulate IFT, such as motor selection, BBSome proteins, or tubulin modification. Interestingly, longer cilia in the ear cristae tend to form larger IFT compared to shorter spinal cord cilia. Reducing the size of IFT particles by knocking down Ift88 slowed IFT speed and resulted in the formation of shorter cilia. Our study proposes an intriguing model of cilia length regulation via controlling IFT speed through the modulation of the size of the IFT complex. This discovery may provide further insights into our understanding of how organelle size is regulated in higher vertebrates.
Journal Article