DocumentCode :
1078126
Title :
Magnetic cellular switches
Author :
Overby, Darryl R. ; Alenghat, Francis J. ; Montoya-Zavala, Martín ; Bei, HuCheng ; Oh, Philmo ; Karavitis, John ; Ingber, Donald E.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Pathology & Surg., Harvard Med. Sch., Boston, MA, USA
Volume :
40
Issue :
4
fYear :
2004
fDate :
7/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
2958
Lastpage :
2960
Abstract :
This paper focuses on the development of magnetic cellular switches to enable magnetic control of intracellular functions in living mammalian cells, including receptor signal transduction and gene transcription. Our approach takes advantage of the mechanosensitivity of adenosine 3´,5´-monophosphate (cAMP) induction and downstream transcription controlled by the cAMP regulatory element (CRE) to engineer gene constructs that optically report gene expression in living cells. We activate transcription of these gene reporters by applying magnetic (mechanical) stress to magnetic microbeads bound to cell surface integrin receptors. In these gene reporter constructs, CRE motifs drive the expression of fluorescent proteins or enzymes that produce fluorescent products, such as DsRed and β-lactamase (BLA), respectively. We demonstrate that a chemical inducer of cAMP (forskolin) increases expression of CRE-DsRed in living cells. More importantly, a threefold increase in CRE-BLA expression is induced by application of mechanical stress to magnetic microbeads (4.5 μm) bound to cell surface integrin receptors. Induction of cAMP could be detected within 5 min using a protein fragment complementation assay involving interactions between the KID and KIX domains of the CRE binding protein linked to complementary halves of the BLA enzyme. These studies confirm that application of magnetic stress to integrins induces gene transcription by activating the cAMP-dependent transcription factor CREB. Ongoing studies focus on optimizing sensitivity and reducing signal-to-noise by establishing stable cell lines that express these gene reporters. These studies collectively demonstrate the feasibility of using magnetic technologies to control function in living mammalian cells and, hence, support the possibility of developing magnetically-actuated cellular components for use in future micro- and nanotechnologies.
Keywords :
biomagnetism; cellular biophysics; magnetic switching; microcontrollers; micromagnetics; microswitches; proteins; biological cells; biological control systems; biological signal transduction; biomagnetics; cAMP regulatory element; cell surface integrin receptors; enzymes; fluorescent proteins; gene constructs; gene transcription; magnetic microbeads; magnetic stress; mammalian cells; mechanosensitivity; nanotechnologies; receptor signal transduction; Biochemistry; Fluorescence; Gene expression; Magnetic switching; Micromagnetics; Optical control; Optical sensors; Optical switches; Proteins; Stress; Biological cells; biological control systems; biological signal transduction; biomagnetics;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9464
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TMAG.2004.828991
Filename :
1325698
Link To Document :
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