Intracellular Water Exchange for Measuring the Dry Mass, Water Mass and Changes in Chemical Composition of Living Cells

Francisco Feijó Delgado(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Nathan Cermak(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Vivian Hecht(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Sungmin Son(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Yingzhong Li(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Scott M. Knudsen(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Selim Olçum(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), John M. Higgins(Harvard University), Jianzhu Chen(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), William H. Grover(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Scott R. Manalis(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
PLoS ONE
July 2, 2013
Cited by 179Open Access
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Abstract

We present a method for direct non-optical quantification of dry mass, dry density and water mass of single living cells in suspension. Dry mass and dry density are obtained simultaneously by measuring a cell's buoyant mass sequentially in an H2O-based fluid and a D2O-based fluid. Rapid exchange of intracellular H2O for D2O renders the cell's water content neutrally buoyant in both measurements, and thus the paired measurements yield the mass and density of the cell's dry material alone. Utilizing this same property of rapid water exchange, we also demonstrate the quantification of intracellular water mass. In a population of E. coli, we paired these measurements to estimate the percent dry weight by mass and volume. We then focused on cellular dry density - the average density of all cellular biomolecules, weighted by their relative abundances. Given that densities vary across biomolecule types (RNA, DNA, protein), we investigated whether we could detect changes in biomolecular composition in bacteria, fungi, and mammalian cells. In E. coli, and S. cerevisiae, dry density increases from stationary to exponential phase, consistent with previously known increases in the RNA/protein ratio from up-regulated ribosome production. For mammalian cells, changes in growth conditions cause substantial shifts in dry density, suggesting concurrent changes in the protein, nucleic acid and lipid content of the cell.


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