KANAZAWA, Japan, Nov. 5, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Researchers at Kanazawa University report, in Science how concentration gradients of particular molecules ('synthetic morphogens') can be produced in biological systems. Such gradients can be exploited for programming pattern formation, offering the promise of controlled tissue engineering.
Multicellular organisms can grow and develop thanks to so-called morphogens: molecules that provide positional information. They are produced in a source, from which they diffuse and build up a concentration gradient in their environment. Nearby cells can 'read' this gradient, therefore 'know' where they are in the organism and 'act' accordingly. Now, Satoshi Toda from Kanazawa University and colleagues report the successful engineering of a synthetic morphogen system that can be programmed. This achievement not only helps to understand how exactly morphogens encode positional information, but is also promising in the context of engineered tissue formation.
Toda who is a PI at the NanoLSI WPI at Kanazawa University, has in a few years become an expert on programming cell patterning and tissue self-assembly, and his team tackled the question of what a minimal synthetic morphogen signaling system looks like, with the synthetic system operating 'orthogonally' to biological (endogenous) morphogens, meaning that the endogenous and the synthetic system don't interfere.
The researchers adapted an existing synthetic receptor system called synNotch so that it worked for soluble green fluorescent proteins (GFPs) as the morphogen molecules. (The original synNotch system requires morphogen molecules to be connected to a cell membrane, i.e. be non-soluble.) They did so by designing so-called anchor cells that can capture a GFP molecule in solution. An anchor cell carrying a trapped GFP molecule is then detected by a receiver cell (through chemical docking). Toda and colleagues demonstrated that this approach worked in vitro: a concentration gradient of GFP morphogen and activated cells formed within about 24 hours.
The scientists then investigated how the shape of the morphogen gradient can be regulated. They found that for different anchor protein densities, different gradient shapes were obtained. In addition, the spatial distribution of the gradient could be influenced through the use of inhibitors (molecules blocking the anchor-receiver mechanism). Toda and colleagues concluded that synthetic morphogen gradients can be tuned so that shapes similar to those occurring in vivo are obtained.
Finally, the research team around Toda showed that it is possible to alter the 'interpretation' of the gradient. They designed different kinds of feedback circuits, for example one in which GFP detection leads to more GFP production, or one in which GFP detection leads to GFP inhibitor production. Via such circuit engineering combined with the morphogen and inhibitor sources, the scientists were able to produce binary and ternary domain structures.
The results of Toda and colleagues have promising application potential. Citing the researchers: "These synthetic morphogen platforms can program positional information without cross-talk to endogenous signaling pathways. Thus, it may be possible to deploy them in vivo as inert tools to probe or redirect [tissue] development."
Related figure
https://nanolsi.kanazawa-u.ac.jp/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/8ba2015f5ccca51facee7e5f23441248.jpg
Caption: Arbitrary proteins such as GFP can turn into a synthetic morphogen that forms a gradient pattern of gene expression.
Related website
Research Highlights NanoLSI Kanazawa University
https://nanolsi.kanazawa-u.ac.jp/en/achievements/achievements-13345/
Background
Morphogens
Morphogens are molecules that are essential for the biological process of pattern formation. They are produced in a source, after which they diffuse through surrounding tissue in an embryo, setting up concentration gradients in the process. These gradients then drive the biochemical reactions that ultimately lead to the formation of all the various tissues and organs in an organism. Kanazawa University's Satoshi Toda, a pioneer of programming multicellular self-organizing structures, and colleagues have now shown that it is possible to design synthetic morphogen systems that have programming functionality but at the same time do not interfere with biological (non-synthetic) morphogen systems.
Green fluorescent protein
Green fluorescent protein (GFP) is a molecule displaying green fluorescence upon exposure to blue-to-ultraviolet light. GFP is often used in biomedical protein expression experiments. For instance, it has been shown that the GFP gene can be expressed in specific cells, particular organs, or whole organisms. Now, Toda and colleagues have shown that (soluble) GFP can be used as a synthetic morphogen.
Reference
Satoshi Toda, Wesley L. McKeithan, Teemu J. Hakkinen, Pilar Lopez, Ophir D. Klein, and Wendell A. Lim. Engineering synthetic morphogen systems that can program multicellular patterning, Science370, 327-331 (2020).
DOI: 10.1126/science.abc0033
URL: https://science.sciencemag.org/content/370/6514/327
Further information
About WPI nanoLSI Kanazawa University
Hiroe Yoneda
Vice Director of Public Affairs
WPI Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-NanoLSI)
Kanazawa University
Kakuma-machi, Kanazawa 920-1192, Japan
Email: nanolsi-office@adm.kanazawa-u.ac.jp
Tel: +81 (76) 234-4550
About Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-NanoLSI)
https://nanolsi.kanazawa-u.ac.jp/en/
Nano Life Science Institute (NanoLSI), Kanazawa University is a research center established in 2017 as part of the World Premier International Research Center Initiative of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. The objective of this initiative is to form world-tier research centers. NanoLSI combines the foremost knowledge of bio-scanning probe microscopy to establish 'nano-endoscopic techniques' to directly image, analyze, and manipulate biomolecules for insights into mechanisms governing life phenomena such as diseases.
About Kanazawa University
http://www.kanazawa-u.ac.jp/e/
As the leading comprehensive university on the Sea of Japan coast, Kanazawa University has contributed greatly to higher education and academic research in Japan since it was founded in 1949. The University has three colleges and 17 schools offering courses in subjects that include medicine, computer engineering, and humanities.
The University is located on the coast of the Sea of Japan in Kanazawa - a city rich in history and culture. The city of Kanazawa has a highly respected intellectual profile since the time of the fiefdom (1598-1867). Kanazawa University is divided into two main campuses: Kakuma and Takaramachi for its approximately 10,200 students including 600 from overseas.