Human Cell Chips: Adapting DNA Microarray Spotting Technology to Cell-Based Imaging Assays

Date

2009-10-28

Authors

Hart, Traver
Zhao, Alice
Garg, Ankit
Bolusani, Swetha
Marcotte, Edward M.

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Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Abstract

Here we describe human spotted cell chips, a technology for determining cellular state across arrays of cells subjected to chemical or genetic perturbation. Cells are grown and treated under standard tissue culture conditions before being fixed and printed onto replicate glass slides, effectively decoupling the experimental conditions from the assay technique. Each slide is then probed using immunofluorescence or other optical reporter and assayed by automated microscopy. We show potential applications of the cell chip by assaying HeLa and A549 samples for changes in target protein abundance (of the dsRNA-activated protein kinase PKR), subcellular localization (nuclear translocation of NFκB) and activation state (phosphorylation of STAT1 and of the p38 and JNK stress kinases) in response to treatment by several chemical effectors (anisomycin, TNFα, and interferon), and we demonstrate scalability by printing a chip with ~4,700 discrete samples of HeLa cells. Coupling this technology to high-throughput methods for culturing and treating cell lines could enable researchers to examine the impact of exogenous effectors on the same population of experimentally treated cells across multiple reporter targets potentially representing a variety of molecular systems, thus producing a highly multiplexed dataset with minimized experimental variance and at reduced reagent cost compared to alternative techniques. The ability to prepare and store chips also allows researchers to follow up on observations gleaned from initial screens with maximal repeatability.

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Citation

Hart T, Zhao A, Garg A, Bolusani S, Marcotte EM (2009) Human Cell Chips: Adapting DNA Microarray Spotting Technology to Cell-Based Imaging Assays. PLoS ONE 4(10): e7088. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0007088