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Quantitative and organisational changes in mature extracellular matrix revealed through high-content imaging of total protein fluorescently stained in situ
Author(s) -
Gill Holdsworth,
Hélène Bon,
Marianne Bergin,
Omar Qureshi,
Ross A. Paveley,
John Atkinson,
Linghong Huang,
Roohi Tewari,
Breda M. Twomey,
Timothy S. Johnson
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
scientific reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 213
ISSN - 2045-2322
DOI - 10.1038/s41598-017-10298-x
Subject(s) - in situ , extracellular matrix , extracellular , matrix (chemical analysis) , chemistry , pathology , biochemistry , medicine , chromatography , organic chemistry
Fibrosis is a common driver of end-stage organ failure in most organs. It is characterised by excessive accumulation of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Therapeutic options are limited and novel treatments are urgently required, however current cell-based high-throughput screening (HTS) models to identify molecules affecting ECM accumulation are limited in their relevance or throughput. We report a novel sensitive approach which combines in situ fluorescent staining of accumulated decellularised ECM proteins with automated high-content microscopy. Using this method to measure ECM accumulation in a kidney cell model, we demonstrated good agreement with established radiolabelled amino acid incorporation assays: TGFβ1 delivered a potent pro-fibrotic stimulus, which was reduced by TGFβ antibody or the anti-fibrotic nintedanib. Importantly, our method also provides information about matrix organisation: the extent of ECM accumulation was unaffected by the BMP antagonist Gremlin-1 but a pronounced effect on matrix fibrillar organisation was revealed. This rapid, straightforward endpoint provides quantitative data on ECM accumulation and offers a convenient cross-species readout that does not require antibodies. Our method facilitates discovery of novel pro- and anti-fibrotic agents in 384-well plate format and may be widely applied to in vitro cell-based models in which matrix protein deposition reflects the underlying biology or pathology.

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