Spatially-Resolved Live Cell Tagging and Isolation Using Protected Photoactivatable Cell Dyes
Genshaft, A. S.; Ziegler, C. G. K.; Tzouanas, C. N.; Mead, B. E.; Jaeger, A. M.; Navia, A. W.; King, R. P.; Jacks, T.; Van Humbeck, J. F.; Shalek, A. K.
Show abstract
Whether cultured in vitro or part of a complex tissue in vivo, a cells phenotype and function are significantly influenced by dynamic interactions with its microenvironment. To explicitly examine how a cells spatiotemporal activity impacts its behavior, we developed and validated a strategy termed SPACECAT--Spatially PhotoActivatable Color Encoded Cell Address Tags--to annotate, track, and isolate specific cells in a non-destructive, viability-preserving manner. In SPACECAT, a biological sample is immersed in a photocaged fluorescent molecule, and cells within a location of interest are labeled for further study by uncaging that molecule with user-patterned near-UV light. SPACECAT offers high spatial precision and temporal stability across diverse cell and tissue types, and is compatible with common downstream assays, including flow cytometry and single-cell RNA-Seq. Illustratively, we leveraged this approach in patient-derived intestinal organoids, a spatially complex system less amenable to genetic manipulations, to select for crypt-like regions enriched in stem-like and actively mitotic cells. Moreover, we demonstrate its applicability and utility on ex vivo tissue sections from four healthy organs and an autochthonous lung tumor model, uncovering spatially-biased gene expression patterns among immune cell subsets and identifying rare myeloid phenotypes enriched around tumor/healthy border regions. In sum, our method provides a minimally invasive and broadly applicable approach to link cellular spatiotemporal features and/or behavioral phenotypes with diverse downstream assays, enabling fundamental insights into the connections between tissue microenvironments and biological (dys)function.
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