Label-free high-speed wide-field imaging of single microtubules using interference reflection microscopy : INTERFERENCE REFLECTION IMAGING OF SINGLE MICROTUBULES
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Abstract
<p id="P1">When studying microtubules
<i>in vitro</i>, label free imaging of single microtubules is necessary when the quantity
of purified
tubulin is too low for efficient fluorescent labelling or there is concern that labelling
will disrupt function. Commonly used techniques for observing unlabelled microtubules,
such as video enhanced differential interference contrast, dark-field and more recently
laser-based interferometric scattering microscopy, suffer from a number of drawbacks.
The contrast of differential interference contrast images depends on the orientation
of the microtubules, dark-field is highly sensitive to impurities and optical misalignments.
In addition, all of these techniques require costly optical components such as Nomarski
prisms, dark-field condensers, lasers and laser scanners. Here we show that single
microtubules can be imaged at high speed and with high contrast using interference
reflection microscopy without the aforementioned drawbacks. Interference reflection
microscopy is simple to implement, requiring only the incorporation of a 50/50 mirror
instead of a dichroic in a fluorescence microscope, and with appropriate microscope
settings has a similar signal-to-noise ratio to differential interference contrast
and fluorescence. We demonstrated the utility of interference reflection microscopy
by high-speed imaging and tracking of dynamic microtubules at 100 frames per second.
In conclusion, the optical quality of interference reflection microscopy falls within
the range of other microscope techniques, being inferior to some and superior to others,
depending on the metric used and, with minimal microscope modification, can be used
to study the dynamics of unlabelled microtubules.
</p>
We have developed video microscopy methods to visualize the assembly and disassembly of individual microtubules at 33-ms intervals. Porcine brain tubulin, free of microtubule-associated proteins, was assembled onto axoneme fragments at 37 degrees C, and the dynamic behavior of the plus and minus ends of microtubules was analyzed for tubulin concentrations between 7 and 15.5 microM. Elongation and rapid shortening were distinctly different phases. At each end, the elongation phase was characterized by a second order association and a substantial first order dissociation reaction. Association rate constants were 8.9 and 4.3 microM-1 s-1 for the plus and minus ends, respectively; and the corresponding dissociation rate constants were 44 and 23 s-1. For both ends, the rate of tubulin dissociation equaled the rate of tubulin association at 5 microM. The rate of rapid shortening was similar at the two ends (plus = 733 s-1; minus = 915 s-1), and did not vary with tubulin concentration. Transitions between phases were abrupt and stochastic. As the tubulin concentration was increased, catastrophe frequency decreased at both ends, and rescue frequency increased dramatically at the minus end. This resulted in fewer rapid shortening phases at higher tubulin concentrations for both ends and shorter rapid shortening phases at the minus end. At each concentration, the frequency of catastrophe was slightly greater at the plus end, and the frequency of rescue was greater at the minus end. Our data demonstrate that microtubules assembled from pure tubulin undergo dynamic instability over a twofold range of tubulin concentrations, and that the dynamic instability of the plus and minus ends of microtubules can be significantly different. Our analysis indicates that this difference could produce treadmilling, and establishes general limits on the effectiveness of length redistribution as a measure of dynamic instability. Our results are consistent with the existence of a GTP cap during elongation, but are not consistent with existing GTP cap models.
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