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Mass measurements during lymphocytic leukemia cell polyploidization decouple cell cycle- and cell size-dependent growth

Authors :
Robert J. Kimmerling
Scott R. Manalis
Joon Ho Kang
Teemu P. Miettinen
Selim Olcum
Kristofor R. Payer
Nicholas L. Calistri
Luye Mu
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020.

Abstract

Significance Cell size is believed to influence cell growth through limited transport efficiency in larger cells. However, this has not been experimentally investigated due to a lack of noninvasive, high-precision growth quantification methods suitable for measuring large cells. Here, we have engineered large versions of microfluidic mass sensors called suspended microchannel resonators in order to study the growth of single mammalian cells that range 100-fold in mass. Our measurements, which decouple growth effects caused by cell cycle and cell size, revealed that absolute cell size does not impose strict transport or other limitations that would inhibit growth and that cell cycle has a large influence on growth.<br />Cell size is believed to influence cell growth and metabolism. Consistently, several studies have revealed that large cells have lower mass accumulation rates per unit mass (i.e., growth efficiency) than intermediate-sized cells in the same population. Size-dependent growth is commonly attributed to transport limitations, such as increased diffusion timescales and decreased surface-to-volume ratio. However, separating cell size- and cell cycle-dependent growth is challenging. To address this, we monitored growth efficiency of pseudodiploid mouse lymphocytic leukemia cells during normal proliferation and polyploidization. This was enabled by the development of large-channel suspended microchannel resonators that allow us to monitor buoyant mass of single cells ranging from 40 pg (small pseudodiploid cell) to over 4,000 pg, with a resolution ranging from ∼1% to ∼0.05%. We find that cell growth efficiency increases, plateaus, and then decreases as cell cycle proceeds. This growth behavior repeats with every endomitotic cycle as cells grow into polyploidy. Overall, growth efficiency changes 33% throughout the cell cycle. In contrast, increasing cell mass by over 100-fold during polyploidization did not change growth efficiency, indicating exponential growth. Consistently, growth efficiency remained constant when cell cycle was arrested in G2. Thus, cell cycle is a primary determinant of growth efficiency. As growth remains exponential over large size scales, our work finds no evidence for transport limitations that would decrease growth efficiency.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b5b3dd1e35ebf40918840c81dd8c1f5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1922197117