Publication | Open Access
An Optical Technique for Mapping Microviscosity Dynamics in Cellular Organelles
182
Citations
35
References
2018
Year
Biophysical ModelingEngineeringMicroscopyMolecular BiologyCytoskeletonCell BiophysicsCellular PhysiologyLight MicroscopyMolecular RotorsMolecular ImagingBiophysicsNovel Imaging MethodBiophotonicsCell BiologyBiophysical AspectMapping Microviscosity DynamicsPattern FormationMicroscopic ViscosityBiomedical ImagingCell MicroviscosityCellular BiochemistryMedicineOrganelle DynamicCell Imaging
Microscopic viscosity (microviscosity) is a key determinant of diffusion in the cell and defines the rate of biological processes occurring at the nanoscale, including enzyme-driven metabolism and protein folding. Here we establish a rotor-based organelle viscosity imaging (ROVI) methodology that enables real-time quantitative mapping of cell microviscosity. This approach uses environment-sensitive dyes termed molecular rotors, covalently linked to genetically encoded probes to provide compartment-specific microviscosity measurements via fluorescence lifetime imaging. ROVI visualized spatial and temporal dynamics of microviscosity with suborganellar resolution, reporting on a microviscosity difference of nearly an order of magnitude between subcellular compartments. In the mitochondrial matrix, ROVI revealed several striking findings: a broad heterogeneity of microviscosity among individual mitochondria, unparalleled resilience to osmotic stress, and real-time changes in microviscosity during mitochondrial depolarization. These findings demonstrate the use of ROVI to explore the biophysical mechanisms underlying cell biological processes.
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