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1.IntroductionTo understand cell signaling at the molecular level, the capacity to monitor and resolve molecular interactions at their scale is mandatory. Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET), a physical nonradiative process that occurs between an excited fluorophore (donor) and another fluorophore (acceptor), can be measured to evaluate molecular proximity. Combined to molecular spectroscopy or optical imaging techniques, it allows accurate distance measurements between interacting molecules at the nanoscale (). Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) provides a sensitive approach to measure FRET, by quantifying the decrease in the lifetime of the donor fluorophore when an acceptor fluorophore is within .1,2 FRET-FLIM allow spatial distribution measurements of molecule ensembles within several structural states; however, the conventional microscopy methods used for FLIM are diffraction-limited, limiting the resolution of these measurements. Single-molecule FRET is a well-established method to study single protein conformation and dynamics.3–5 FRET-FLIM measurements combined with single-molecule microscopy were successfully implemented.6 FRET-FLIM was also combined with structured illumination microscopy.7 Optical nanoscopy methods that overcome the diffraction barrier such as stimulated emission depletion (STED)8 allow precise characterization of the spatial distribution and organization of cellular nanodomains. FLIM has been successfully combined with STED nanoscopy in fixed biological samples9–11 and reversible saturable optical linear fluorescence transitions (RESOLFT) for live-cell imaging.12 In this study, we evaluated the benefits of performing FRET with fluorescence lifetime imaging nanoscopy (FRET-FLIN) over FRET-FLIM, using simulation, and compared different fluorescence lifetime analysis approaches. We performed FRET-FLIN on a custom-built STED microscope to spatially resolve protein interactions at the nanoscale in dendritic spines of cultured hippocampal neurons. Dendritic spines are 0.5 to in size; they decorate dendrites and constitute the main sites of excitatory synapses on neurons. The proteins that participate in synaptic transmission in dendritic spines are densely packed, forming the postsynaptic density (PSD). To label putatively interacting proteins with donor and acceptor dyes, inside spines, we used an immunocytochemistry-based approach. Our results demonstrate the capacity of FRET-FLIN to observe signaling in nanoclusters of proteins. It can discriminate the extent of interaction that distinct synaptic receptor nanoclusters have with labeled protein partners, inside dendritic spines of hippocampal neurons. 2.Results2.1.FLIN Microscope SystemWe built a STED microscope with additional time-correlated single-photon counting (TCSPC) capacity to perform FRET-FLIN measurements in cultured hippocampal neurons (Sec. 4).10,13,14 This system could perform STED imaging of ATTO 594 and confocal imaging of ATTO 647N. In STED nanoscopy, the resolution is improved using a donut-shaped depletion beam that typically lasts a few hundreds of picoseconds to ensure optimal depletion of the fluorescence surrounding the center of the point spread function. However, for FLIN, considering the fluorescence lifetime of organic dyes or fluorescent proteins (1 to 5 ns), keeping the pulse length short, increases the reliability of lifetime quantification. We, therefore, opted for a 150-ps excitation and depletion pulses. To characterize the resolution of our STED microscope, we measured the full width at half maximum (FWHM) on single clusters of the neuronal glutamate receptor GluN2B and antibody clusters on a glass coverslip. We could resolve nanoclusters well below the diffraction limit with a mean FWHM of 73.3 nm (STD 13.7 nm) for GluN2B and 66.9 nm (STD 11.0 nm) for antibody clusters (Sec. 4). A critical requirement for fluorescence lifetime measurements is to collect sufficient photons per pixel to generate precise fitting statistics on the lifetime of the fluorophores.15 Inherent to a smaller PSF, FLIN will collect much less photons compared with FLIM. A strategy to obtain sufficient photons is to apply spatial binning. With our experimental settings (binning of 2), we collected around 14,000 photons in FLIM mode and 1000 in FLIN mode (Sec. 5). We combined the FLIN signal (pixel size of ) with the STED intensity images (pixel size of ) generating intensity-weighted lifetime images. Considering the recording times of several minutes necessary to obtain a sufficient number of photons, we performed FRET-FLIN on fixed neurons immunolabeled against the proteins of interest.16,17 This prevented live cell protein mobility and interaction variations during single-photon counting to blur the recorded FRET and intensity signals. 2.2.Simulations: FRET-FLIM versus FRET-FLINWe used simulations to evaluate the benefits of FRET-FLIN over FRET-FLIM, as well as the optimal parameters to use for analysis. The simulation of the fluorescence lifetime dynamics was based on the fluorescence rate equations (see Sec. 5.1). We simulated results with a (i) FLIM configuration on a diffraction limited confocal microscope (PSF 250 nm) and a (ii) FLIN configuration on a super-resolution STED microscope (PSF 50 nm). We randomly positioned donor fluorescent molecules without FRET interaction (lifetime of 3.2 ns) or with a FRET efficiency of 15% (lifetime of 2.7 ns) (see Fig. 1 and Sec. 5). FLIM would generate a blurry heat map image of lifetimes in the spine [Fig. 1(d)], as we have observed experimentally.18 FLIN would allow to resolve various lifetimes across different nanoclusters [Fig. 1(e)]. As Fig. 1(f) indicates, a wider range of lifetimes can be discriminated with FLIN compared to FLIM, due to the averaging that the lower resolution imposes in FLIM. We explored with simulations the various methods to analyze fluorescence lifetime with limited photons available, inherent to a smaller PSF, and in the presence of FRET (see Sec. 5). To analyze the lifetime measurements, the accuracy of a commonly used method in commercial systems, the least square fit (LS),19,20 dropped dramatically with photons, introducing systematic errors [Fig. 1(g)].21 With low photon counts, the mean photon arrival time (MT) approach19,22,23 provides a low relative error [Fig. 1(g)], but when applied to FRET-FLIM analysis, an increasing systematic error is introduced with increasing FRET efficiency [Fig. 1(h)]. This effect can be related to the single-component lifetime assumption made in MT analysis, while FRET introduces a multicomponent lifetime.2,24 Thus, analysis using MT would underestimate the level of FRET, unless a linear correction is applied based on our simulations. The maximum likelihood fit (MLE),20,21 which is a well-established method for STED-FLIM analysis,10,12,25,26 do not introduce systematic errors related to FRET efficiency21 with a similar relative error but generated a slightly higher standard deviation with photons [Fig. 1(g)]. Based on these simulations, which emphasize the impact of fluorescence lifetime analysis method with limited photon collection, we chose the MLE method for FLIN data analysis, as it provides reasonable accuracy under low photon count, without the need to correct for a systematic error. 2.3.FRET-FLIN to Resolve FRET in NanoclustersTo test whether we could measure FRET with FLIN in nanoclusters of immunolabeled proteins, we chose a protein complex, , made of 12 similar subunits (forming a holoenzyme of two opposed hexamers). Each subunit should be within approximately 5 nm to each other inside a CaMKII hexamer, or between opposing subunits on separate hexamers.27 was immunolabeled with a well-characterized monoclonal antibody that binds to the regulatory domain of the kinase,28 which should be positioned apart on neighboring subunits.27 Equal concentrations of donor (ATTO 594) and acceptor (ATTO 647N) secondary antibody were added [Fig 2(a)]. We expected this labeling configuration to yield strong FRET given the proximity of the donor and acceptor labeled secondary antibodies. With STED, we observed nanoclusters of immunolabeled αCaMKII in spines and dendrites [Fig. 2(b)]. In the presence of the acceptor, FLIN measurements yielded a fluorescence lifetime around 2.4 ns in single nanoclusters, which is significantly shorter compared with the control experiment with donor alone (3.1 ns). This corresponds to an averaged FRET efficiency of 21.4%. These results indicate that immunostaining can be applied with FLIN to measure FRET inside protein nanoclusters. Analysis of these FLIN measurements with MT, by comparison with MLE, yielded a smaller difference, similar to that predicted by our simulations (Sec. 5.3 and Fig. 3). We next tested whether our approach can discriminate the proximity of two labels that are within close or distal FRET range in a dendritic spine. For these experiments, we immunolabeled two NMDA receptor subunits (GluN1 and GluN2B), which are part of the same tetrameric receptor (2:2 ratio).29 We used recombinant tagged subunits (GluN1-GFP and GluN2B-HA) to ensure specificity of the antibody recognition and to control epitope location [Figs. 4(a) and 4(b)]. Despite its larger size, GFP has been used as a tag on glutamate receptor subunits before, without interference on receptor expression and assembly.18,30,31 We first coexpressed GluN1-GFP and GluN2B-HA, both tags being on the c-terminus of the receptor subunits at the intracellular side of the plasma membrane, to evaluate the performance of our method when significant FRET is expected [Fig. 4(b)]. We also coexpressed untagged GluN1 and GFP-GluN2B-HA constructs, with the GFP tag being extracellular and the HA-tag intracellular, to assess the performance of our approach when low FRET efficiency is expected [Fig. 4(a)]. We fixed the neurons with methanol and immunostained with the same pairs of primary (anti-HA and anti-GFP) and secondary (ATTO 594 and ATTO 647N) antibodies. We measured a median FRET efficiency of 3.2% () in nanoclusters inside spines when both tags were on opposite sides of the receptor (GFP-GluN2B-HA). The small level of measured may reflect the fact that the epitopes on both ends of the GluN2B are apart. However, the distance uncertainty caused by primary/secondary antibody labeling may lead to some FRET, even if the epitopes are slightly more than 10 nm away. Nevertheless, the fluorescence lifetime of the donor + acceptor was not significantly different compared with donor alone (Sec. 5.3 and Fig. 12). It should be noted that the plasma membrane should have little impact on FRET, as it is largely dissolved by the methanol fixation. In contrast, for the GluN1-GFP/GluN2B-HA pair, where both tags are on the same side of the tetrameric receptor, the median FRET efficiency was significantly larger (9.5%, ) [Figs. 4(b) and 4(c)]. These results indicate that our immuno-FRET-FLIN approach can discriminate proximity of labels that are within short distances inside the FRET range. 2.4.Monitoring CaMKII Signaling at the NanoscaleTo assess the reliability of this approach to characterize different levels of signaling activity, we measured the changes in T286 phosphorylation using a double immunostaining of (ATTO 594-Donor) and phosphoT286- (ATTO 647N-Acceptor) [Fig. 5(a)]. Neurons were fixed with or without prior bath application of a solution lacking , containing glycine and picrotoxin (used to induce chemical long-term potentiation or cLTP).32 The rationale for this experiment was to examine whether autophosphorylation, expected to occur upon cLTP stimulation,32 could be detected and localized in αCaMKII nanoclusters via FRET-FLIN. If so, we expect higher levels of FRET on nanoclusters that include phosphorylated subunits. To set a baseline level of FRET, we incubated the neurons with NMDA receptor blocker AP5, to reduce phosphorylation at T286.32 Under these conditions, the median FRET efficiency in nanoclusters was 3.5% (IQR 12.1) [Fig. 5(b)]. Under these conditions, the fluorescence lifetime was significantly lower to that of the donor alone (Sec. 5.3 and Fig. 12), consistent with some binding of antiphosphoT286 antibody under basal condition. After cLTP stimulation, the median FRET efficiency significantly increased to 5.2% (IQR 8.4), consistent with additional autophosphorylated αCaMKII. After 10-min wash in AP5 poststimulation [Fig. 5(a), 10-min post-cLTP], the median FRET efficiency dropped to 4.1% (IQR 11.3). These results indicate that immuno-FRET-FLIN can reveal changes of phosphorylation level in nanoclusters of proteins inside a single dendritic spine. 2.5.Monitoring Interactions of αCaMKII with GluN2B Nanoclusters in Dendritic SpinesWe further tested if our method could be applied to measure the levels of interaction between two different proteins. Several reports have shown that can interact with the c-tail of the NMDA receptor subunit GluN2B, and that this interaction is promoted by neuronal activity.33–37 For this purpose, we immunostained GluN2B with a rabbit antibody targeting its C-terminus (ATTO 594-Donor) and αCaMKII (ATTO 647N-Acceptor) with a mouse antibody [Fig. 6(a)]. With FLIN, but not with FLIM, we could measure variable degrees of FRET in resolved nanoclusters inside a single spine [Fig. 6(b)]. This is characterized by a wider distribution of for the FLIN images [Fig. 6(c), 8.61% and 10.01%], which can be explained by fluorescence lifetime averaging in FLIM due to lower resolution. Under these conditions, the fluorescence lifetime was significantly lower to that of the donor alone (Sec. 5.3 and Fig. 12), suggesting basal binding of CaMKII to GluN2B. In dendritic spines exposed to a cLTP stimulus, we observed a 15% increase of FRET efficiency in GluN2B nanoclusters compared with dendritic spines incubated in AP5 [Fig. 6(d)]. These results indicate that our FRET-FLIN method can provide subspine distribution of interactions between a synaptic receptor and a binding partner. 2.6.Association of AMPA Receptors with StargazinAs a final test case, we examined the association of stargazin with the AMPA receptor on the surface membrane of dendritic spines. The trafficking of AMPA receptors to synapses has been shown to critically depend on its auxiliary subunit stargazin.38–42 Interestingly, recent evidence indicated that AMPA receptors may dissociate from stargazin to exit the synapse.43 We, thus, aimed to label surface AMPAR and stargazin to examine whether their interaction varies across different compartments on the membrane. We cotransfected neurons with GFP-GluA1 and HA-stargazin and performed immunolabeling in nonpermeabilized neurons to reveal only surface receptors, using anti-GFP (ATTO 594) and anti-HA (ATTO 647N) [Fig. 7(a)]. STED nanoscopy revealed resolvable clusters of GFP-GluA1 throughout the dendritic membranes [Fig. 7(c)].44–46 Figure 7(b) shows the confocal image from HA-stargazin (red) overlaid with the STED image of GFP-GluA1 (green). FLIN revealed that a significant fraction of GFP-GluA1 nanoclusters exhibited some degree of interaction with HA-stargazin (Sec. 5.3 and Fig. 12). Meanwhile, FRET-FLIN analysis revealed a higher levels of FRET on dendritic spine membrane compared with the dendritic shaft [Figs. 7(e) and 7(f)]. These results suggest that extrasynaptic AMPA receptors are less associated with stargazin, compared to synaptic ones.43 3.DiscussionWe demonstrate here the possibility to resolve FRET interactions inside nanoscale protein clusters in fixed neurons, using immunocytochemistry, STED nanoscopy, and fluorescence lifetime imaging. This demonstration was possible by the successful combination of STED and FLIM applied to FRET measurements. For cellular structures as small as dendritic spines, the capacity to resolve local protein interactions is essential to understand synaptic function. While FRET provides information on protein interaction, when measured with confocal microscopy, it lacks the spatial resolution to provide information on the precise nanodomain where the interaction occurs. Combining STED with FRET overcomes this limitation. The combination of super-resolution with FRET has, thus far, been very limited. Gorlitz et al. developed a method in which they overlaid diffraction-limited FRET-FLIM images, collected with time-gated wide-field imaging, on structured illumination intensity images of lateral resolution. Winkler et al.6 used a single-molecule imaging method (universal-point-accumulation-in-the-nanoscale-topography or uPAINT) to evaluate epidermal growth factor receptor dimerization. The labeling method used in uPAINT limits FRET measurements to plasma membrane proteins. STED and FLIM have already been combined to facilitate multicolor imaging or to monitor the depletion process.10,25,47 FLIM has been shown to be a robust approach to quantify FRET.48,49 The combination of STED and FLIM to measure FRET becomes a complementary approach to investigate molecular interactions inside nanoclusters of intracellular proteins. For our demonstration, we performed FLIN on fixed samples of cultured neurons, enabling sufficient photon collection from nanodomains. Fixation with and without specific treatments can be used to assess changes in FRET as a proxy of signaling events at nanometric resolution. We targeted proteins that participate in synaptic signaling and plasticity in dendritic spines, for which specific antibodies or tagged recombinant versions were available. As the effectiveness and selectivity of antibodies is highly critical, we chose in some cases to transfect recombinantly tagged proteins, for which we had access to reliable antibodies. We used primary and secondary fluorescent antibodies, which introduce additional spacing and fluorophore orientation considerations, increasing uncertainties on the distance between epitopes. Despite these limitations, immuno-FRET has been used for assessing protein interactions.50,51 We were able to use this approach to measure differential GluA1 interactions with stargazin in distinct membrane regions. Furthermore, our measurements made with NMDA receptors tagged with epitopes at different locations confirmed that the method bares sensitivity to discriminate distances within the FRET range on the same protein complex. An increase in FRET between two separately labeled proteins level might reflect an increased fraction of pairs interacting but might also reflect a conformational change in one or both of the interacting proteins that bring the labeled tags closer. To reduce the uncertainty introduced by antibody labeling, pairs of fluorescent proteins could be used as tags for FRET-FLIM.18,23,52–54 However, STED-based FLIN with fluorescent proteins would introduce significant photobleaching due to their lower photostability compared with organic dyes.55,56 Furthermore, for each possible pair of fluorescent protein, a detailed characterization of the impact of the depletion pulse on the acceptor fluorescent protein would need to be performed. Our simulations confirmed that the choice of analysis method of fluorescence lifetime impacts significantly on the results when photon collection is limited. This is particularly relevant when making measurements from nanoscale-sized regions. The LS method is not optimal with limiting photon counts, making the MLE and MT methods preferable. Although the MT method provides fluorescence lifetime values with the least variations, it introduces an offset when FRET is present, underestimating higher levels of FRET, as predicted by our simulation and confirmed with experimental data (Sec. 5). Our observation of GluN2B nanoclusters exhibiting interactions with CaMKII even before activating NMDA receptors with a cLTP stimulus may seem surprising. However, we found that GluN2B binding to CaMKII is highly persistent, even in low calcium condition.36,37 Thus, CaMKII may remain stably bound to GluN2B, from prior spontaneous activity of the neurons. This is also consistent with a basal level of autophosphorylated CaMKII that we observed in the spines.57 The activity-dependent increase in FRET that we observed between CaMKII and GluN2B, despite being small, is consistent with observations of activity-dependent translocation of GFP-CaMKII to dendritic spines using time-lapse imaging.28,32,36,37,58 In those studies, GFP-CaMKII was also shown to be somewhat enriched in dendritic spines prior to NMDA receptor activation. We proposed that prebound CaMKII may actually serve as the binding partner for additional recruitment of CaMKII to the PSD.28 Indeed, we showed that the recruitment of CaMKII to dendritic spines can be supported by an activity-dependent self-association of the holoenzymes.28 Such added scaffold of CaMKII near the GluN2B c-tail, potentially forming “tower-like structures” extending away from the PSD,59 may not produce more FRET between CaMKII and GluN2B, presumably because of the added distance between the additional stacked CaMKII holoenzymes and the GluN2B c-tail. This putative scenario could explain the limited increase we observed in FRET between CaMKII and GluN2B following stimulation. The observation that GluA1 nanoclusters exhibiting different levels of interaction with stargazin on dendritic shaft vs spine membrane is quite interesting. Indeed, stargazin has been shown to promote immobilization of AMPA receptor in the PSD area, via binding to PSD95.30,41 Meanwhile, Constals et al.43 showed that AMPA receptor desensitization was associated with a decreased binding to stargazin, enabling the exit of receptors from the synapse. Our data are then consistent with the proposal that AMPA receptors near the PSD are preferentially associated with stargazin, compared with extrasynaptic receptors. The model of synaptic nanocolumns, describing receptor clusters in the PSD aligned with presynaptic release sites, would be strengthened by identifying binding partners responsible for the formation and plasticity of these nanocolumns.60 Our approach may be useful for such investigation. Our results indicate that the combination of STED, FLIM, and immuno-FRET can reveal direct or indirect interactions between proteins within nanodomains, as exemplified by our measurements in dendritic spines. FRET-FLIN revealed different degrees of interactions between nanoclusters of proteins that are otherwise missed with conventional FRET-FLIM. The approach can be used to interrogate various pairs of interacting endogenous proteins, providing the availability of specific antibodies, or transfected tagged-proteins using well validated antitag antibodies. A valuable improvement in this method would be to add colors with STED resolution to detect additional proteins as landmarks. In the examples studied here, being able to locate the PSD or the presynaptic active zone would be very informative. Thus, this approach should help the investigation of cell signaling at the nanometer scale. 4.Appendix A: FRET-FLIN SetupWe built an STED microscope based on the work of Wildanger et al.13 and Bückers et al.,10 (Fig. 8) using a single supercontinuum laser source (SC450-PP-He, 2MHZ, 4W, Fianium, NKT, Blokken, Denmark) to generate all excitation and depletion beams. The excitation and the depletion paths were splitted using a dichroic mirror (FF662-FDi01, Semrock, Rochester). The excitation beam was spectrally filtered with an acousto-optical-tunable-filter (AOTFnc-400.650-TN, AA optoelectronics, Orsay, France) and the output beam was spatially filtered through a polarization-maintaining single-mode fiber (PM460 HP, Thorlab, Newton) and the depletion path was additionally filtered with a pinhole. The s and p polarizations of the depletion beam were separated with a polarizing beam splitter. A vortex phase plate was positioned in each depletion path (VPP-1, RPC photonics, Rochester) to generate two donut-shaped depletion beams, for which the s and p polarizations had a clockwise or counter clockwise phase shift pattern, respectively. Both polarizations were then recombined on a common path. Two bandpass filters (FF01-720/13, Semrock) resulting in a Gaussian beam profile ranging from 713 to 726 nm were necessary to obtain a sharp spectral profile and therefore improve the intensity minima of the donut-shaped beam through uniform light retardation on the vortex phase plate. A half and a quarter wave plates were employed for fine tuning and circularization of the polarization. A delay line was used to adjust the timing between the excitation and the depletion pulses to 74 ps.61 The depletion and excitation beams were combined with a dichroic mirror (Z690sprdc-v2, Chroma Technology Corp., Bellows Falls, USA) and the fluorescence was separated with a custom dichroic mirror (Custom STED polychroic V6-246389, Chroma Technology Corp., Bellows Falls). The scanning unit on the microscope (Zeiss Axio Examiner) was built to minimize aberrations at the focal spot and optimize the depletion donut pattern. For this purpose, two galvanometric mirrors (6215H, from Cambridge technology) were placed in the conjugated plane of the back aperture of the microscope objective (Plan Apochromat, 63X, 1.4NA, Zeiss) in a 4f configuration. The detected photons were splitted with a 660 single-edge dichroic (FF660-Di02, Semrock) to discriminate between the donor (ATTO 594) and the acceptor (ATTO 647N) (Fig. 9). The FLIM/FLIN signal of the donor was acquired with a TCSPC card (SPC150, Becker & Hickl, Berlin, Germany) on a fast photomultiplier tube (PMT) (PMC-100-20, Boston electronics, Brookline, USA) with a FF01-609/57 (Semrock) detection filter (Fig. 9). For the acceptor, the intensity signal was acquired on a data acquisition board (NiDAQ, PCI-6111, National Instrument) using a custom integration system with a regular PMT (R3896, and high-voltage socket with transimpedance amplifier C7950, Hamamatsu, Japan) and a FF01-685/40 (Semrock) detection filter. For both emission paths, a 150-mm detection lens was combined to a pinhole in front of the PMT. Prior to each imaging session, the proper alignment of STED donuts over the excitation beam was tested in reflectance with 100-nm gold beads. The acquisition was performed using a modified version of the open-source software ScanImage 3.862 in addition to the TCPSC acquisition software (SPCM v9.6., Becker & Hickle). To collect photons in FLIN mode, a total of 20 images (45 s per image) were recorded for an overall acquisition time of . Postprocessing realignment using a normalized two-dimensional (2-D) cross correlation was performed to correct for sample drift. The realigned images were summed, resulting in a single frame of ( of 24 nm) for the analysis. The resolution of the STED microscope was characterized by measuring the FWHM on single clusters of the neuronal glutamate receptor GluN2B and antibody clusters on a glass coverslip. For GluN2B in dendrites, a mean FWHM of 73.3 nm (STD 13.7 nm) was obtained while for antibody clusters it was 66.9 nm (STD 11.0 nm) (Fig. 10). 5.Appendix B: Simulations and Image Analysis5.1.SimulationsWe have based our simulations on a simplified transfer equation of fluorescence and stimulated emission to model emission and depletion processes involved in FLIN [Eq. (1), adapted from Siegman63 and Lakowicz et al.48]: where where and represent the number of electrons in the excited state and ground state of a molecule, respectively. The rate constants for the excitation, fluorescence emission, stimulated emission, and FRET are indicated with , (inverse of fluorescence lifetime ), , and , respectively. The depletion efficiency is related to the intensity () and the temporal Gaussian profile () of the depletion beam as well as the stimulated emission cross section (). represents the Förster radius (radius for which the FRET efficiency equals 50%) and is the distance between donor and acceptor. Using a numerical solution of that equation, we were able to evaluate the distribution of fluorescence lifetime emitted by a molecule. The properties used to simulate the fluorescence, the excitation, and the depletion are listed in Table 1.Table 1Simulation parameters of FLIN experiments.
To simulate a case of interacting pairs of molecules, a FRET efficiency of 50% ( between ATTO 594 and ATTO 647N) and a FRET probability of 30% between the two proteins were assumed. This corresponds to a measured FRET efficiency of 15%. The lifetime of the donor alone was set to 3.2 ns. Consequently, the calculated lifetime for 15% FRET efficiency was 2.7 ns. The double exponential decay was evaluated by the rate equations with a 30% probability to obtain FRET (70% probability to measure the donor lifetime without FRET interaction) for each simulated molecule. FLIM and FLIN images were simulated [Figs. 1(a)–1(e)] by randomly positioning 250 molecules inside a dendritic spine shape (). A Gaussian excitation PSF and a sinusoidal donut depletion PSF were simulated using the numerical solution of the transfer Eq. (1). The effective fluorescence PSF was applied on each pixel containing a simulated molecule. Subsequently, all photons with shot noise (using Poisson random generator) were added up for each pixel. The performance of three FLIM analysis methods (LS, MT, and MLE) was compared using simulated lifetime histograms with variable FRET levels. A total of 100 independent simulations were performed with photon counts ranging from 100 to 10,000. The simulations were averaged per photon count and compared with the ground truth. 5.2.Curve Fitting and Lifetime QuantificationFor each image or simulation, the lifetime was evaluated using the indicated algorithm (LS, MLE, or MT). Minimization algorithms were based on the following model: where is the total number of collected photons and is the average fitted lifetime. The measured instrument response (IRF) was convolved with the fluorescence exponential decay. The acquisition time resolution was set to 40 ps and a temporal binning of 4 was used, leading to a time resolution of 158 ps. A convolutive spatial binning of 2 was applied, corresponding to an effective pixel size of 48 nm for the FLIN signal. The photons outside of the fitting window (red and green dashed lines in Fig. 11) were excluded from the fitting routine. The fitting algorithms were based on the MATLAB (Mathworks) function fmincon, which finds the minimum of constrained multivariable nonlinear function. Cost function for minimization was based on the work of Maus et al.21 for both MLE [Eq. (3) and LS Eq. (4)]: where is the number of data points, is the number of parameters, is the measured data, and is the function to be fitted [Eq. (2)]. In the case of the MT method,22 we used the photon mean arrival of the IRF and subtracted it from the data itself:19,22Note here that the MT method does not provide an absolute lifetime value. To correct for that bias in single-exponential lifetime, it is necessary to evaluate the lifetime of the donor only using a fitting approach on a known sample without acceptor. The obtained correction factor can be applied on all experiment made in that condition. 5.3.Image AnalysisThe quantification of fluorescence lifetime was performed as described in the previous section (curve fitting and lifetime quantification) using the MLE algorithm for curve fitting. We applied Richardson–Lucy deconvolution on the intensity signal (2-D Gaussian function for confocal and 2-D Lorentz function for STED images) using a build-in MATLAB function deconvlucy.m and emulated PSFs of 270 and 60 nm for confocal and STED images, respectively. To measure the individual cluster intensities and the associated lifetime values, clusters detected using an adaptive threshold algorithm combined with a morphological analysis.64 Those segmented regions were associated with the lifetime image and the lifetime values for each cluster were retrieved by averaging all pixel inside a given cluster. A colormap image was obtained from the determined lifetime values for each pixel and multiplied by the corresponding intensity image to generate the intensity weighted lifetime images. For spine area selection, regions were manually drawn around excrescences on dendrites. For each experiments, a control immunolabeling with the donor alone was performed to determine the donor lifetime under the same biological and imaging conditions (Fig 12). All pixels of the donor-alone control images were averaged to evaluate the value of donor lifetime. The FRET efficiency was calculated with , as represents the measured fluorescence lifetime of the donor alone and is the measured fluorescence lifetime of the donor in presence of acceptor. Note that the measured FRET efficiency values can be negative due to the intrinsic distribution of the fluorescent molecule lifetime. 5.4.Statistical AnalysisStatistical analyses were performed over cluster distributions. Outliers were defined as values larger than or smaller than , where and are the 25th and 75th percentiles, respectively. The non-normal distributed datasets were tested by a Wilcoxon rank sum test and statistical significance was determined with using two-tailed tests. All data are presented as median with IQR value. Data were analyzed using MATLAB statistical toolbox. 6.Appendix C: Material and Methods6.1.Neuronal Cultures and TransfectionDissociated hippocampal neurons were prepared as described.28,65 Before dissection of hippocampi, neonatal rats were sacrificed by decapitation, in accordance with the procedures approved by the animal care committee of Université Laval. Neurons were transfected with the plasmids encoding GFP-GluN2B-HA, GluN1-GFP, GluN2B-HA, SEP-GluA1, or HA-Stargazin at 11-14 DIV using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) as described previously.66 Fixation was performed 24 h after transfection. To reduce toxicity generated by the overexpression of the plasmids GFP-GluN2B-HA, GluN1-GFP, and GluN2B-HA, AP5 (Cayman) was added 3 h after transfection. The plasmid GFP-GluN2B-HA was generated by PCR amplification of the cDNA encoding GFP-GluN2B with primers 5’-CAAGACACGTGCTGAAGTCAAG-3’ and 5’-GCTAGTGGTCCACATGTAGTACCG-3’. The PCR product was then digested with SnaBI-XhoI (digestion product contains incomplete CMV promoter, first part of GluN2B and the GFP) and inserted into the SnaBI-XhoI site of GluN2B-HA. GluN2B-HA was generated by inserting a HA tag at amino acid 1275 of GluN2B in a pRK5 vector. SEP-GluA1, HA-Stargazin, and GluN1-GFP were described previously.18,30,32 6.2.ImmunocytochemistryCells were fixed either in methanol () or in a freshly prepared 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) solution (4% sucrose, 100 mM phosphate, 2 mM NaEGTA) [room temperature (RT)] for 10 min. PFA fixation was used only for the GluA1-Stargazin experiment to label exclusively extracellular membrane proteins. After fixation, cells were washed three times for 5 min in PBS (PBS with 0.1 mM Glycine for PFA fixation). To limit unspecific binding, cells were first incubated for 1 h in a blocking solution (BS) consisting of PBS completed with 10% normal goat serum. Primary antibody incubation was performed with BS for 2 h at RT or overnight at 4°C. After five washes in PBS, the secondary antibodies were applied with BS for 1 h at RT. The following antibodies were used: rabbit antiphosphoT286-CaMKII (1:500, Cell signaling technology), Mouse anti-αCaMKII (1:200, ThermoFisher Scientific), Rabbit anti-GluN2B-CT (1:500, Alomone, AGC-003), Mouse anti-GFP (1:500, ThermoFisher Scientific), Rat anti-HA (1:250, Roche), and their corresponding secondary antibodies, ATTO 594 (1:500) or ATTO 647N (1:500, ATTO-TEC). To measure the influence of cLTP stimulation on CaMKII T286 autophosphorylation, neurons were incubated for 5 min in free-magnesium heated artificial cerebrospinal fluid () solution consisting of HBSS supplemented with, in mM: 10 HEPES, , 2 glucose, 0.2 glycine, and 0.01 picrotoxin. Neurons were either fixed directly after stimulation (cLTP) or washed for 10 min in AP5 ()-containing regular ACSF (10 min post-cLTP). The immunolabeled coverslips were mounted in 2,2’-thiodiethanol (TDE, Sigma Aldrich), based on the protocol described in Staudt et al.67 This polymerization free mounting media minimizes lifetime alterations of fluorescent dyes and aberrations caused by refractive index () mismatch () (coverslips were incubated with gradually increasing concentration of TDE (10%, 25%, 50%, and ) for 30 min/concentration to avoid cell shrinkage while completely removing water.67 DisclosuresThe authors declare no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. AcknowledgmentsWe thank F. Nault for preparing neuronal cultures, A. Castonguay and M. Lemieux for comments on the paper, the CERVO Molecular Tool Platform for cloning and preparation of plasmid DNA. We thank M. Stratton (UMass) for providing info on the structure of CaMKII. Research was funded by the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR) and the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) (P.D.K.). C.T. was supported by a scholarship from the Fonds de Recherche du Québec Nature et Technologie; G.N. was supported by a CIHR studentship; S.L. and F.L.C. were supported by the Brain Canada Neurophotonics Platform and the NSERC training program in Biophotonics. C.T. built the FLIN setup, acquired all of the data and performed the simulations. C.T. and G.N. performed the immunocytochemistry. C.T., G.N., S.L., F.L.C., P.D.K. wrote the manuscript, made the figures, and performed the data analysis. C.T., D.C., and P.D.K. designed the study. ReferencesM. Elangovan, R. N. Day and A. Periasamy,
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BiographyChristian Tardif is a PhD candidate in biophotonics. He received his BSc degree in physics engineering and his MSc degree in neurosciences from the Université Laval, Canada. He joined INO in Québec City in 2015. His work focuses on the development of new microscopy tools. His main interests are super-resolution microscopy, fluorescence lifetime imaging, neuroscience, and image analysis. Gabriel Nadeau received his BSc degree in biomedical sciences and his MSc degree in biophotonics from the Université Laval, Canada. Currently, he is studying for a medicine degree at the Université Laval. His research interests are focused on neuronal calcium signaling, fluorescence imaging of biological tissues, and image processing. Simon Labrecque received his MSc degree in physics and his PhD in biophotonics from the Université Laval, Canada. He joined the CERVO Brain Research Center as an optical engineer and a coordinator in the Neurophotonics Center for the testing platform of new imaging tools and image analysis routines. He has a strong interest in cellular neuroscience, new developments in live optical microscopy, and single-molecule tracking with fluorescent molecules or nanoparticles. Daniel Côté received his BSc degree in physics from Université Laval, Canada, in 1995 and his PhD in physics from the University of Toronto, Canada, in 2003. Following postdoctoral fellowships at the Ontario Cancer Institute and the Wellman Center for Photomedicine in Boston, he joined Université Laval where he is a full professor and affiliated with the CERVO Brain Research Center. His research group develops microscopy tools for neuroscience and neurosurgical guidance devices and investigates strategies for deciphering brain connectivity and function. Flavie Lavoie-Cardinal received her PhD in chemistry from the University of Siegen, Germany in 2011, and postdoctoral trainings (i) at the MPI for biophysical chemistry in Göttingen, Germany until 2014, and (ii) at the CERVO Brain Research Center, Quebec City, Canada. Since 2017, she is an independent researcher at CERVO and an adjunct professor at Université Laval. Her research interests are in optical nanoscopy, cellular and molecular neuroscience, and application of machine learning to bioimaging techniques. Paul De Koninck received his PhD in neurobiology from McGill University, Canada, in 1995 and postdoctoral training at Stanford University. In 2001, he joined the Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology, and Bioinformatics at the Université Laval, Canada, where he is a full professor. He is the director of the cellular and molecular neuroscience division at the CERVO Brain Research Center in Quebec City. His research interests are in cellular and molecular neuroscience, synaptic signaling and plasticity, using advanced optical methods. |