Imaging Cell Lineage with a Synthetic Digital Recording System | AIChE

Imaging Cell Lineage with a Synthetic Digital Recording System

Authors 

Chow, K. H. K. - Presenter, California Institute of Technology
Budde, M. W., California Institute of Technology
Granados, A. A., California Institute of Technology
Cabrera, M., California Institute of Technology
Yoon, S., California Institute of Technology
Cho, S., California Institute of Technology
Huang, T. H., California Institute of Technology
Koulena, N., California Institute of Technology
Frieda, K. L., Spatial Genomics
Cai, L., Caltech
Lois, C., Caltech
Elowitz, M. B., California Institute of Technology

During multicellular development, spatial position and lineage history play powerful roles in controlling cell fate decisions. Using a serine integrase-based recording system, we engineered cells to record lineage information in a format that can be read out in situ. The system, termed integrase-editable memory by engineered mutagenesis with optical in situ readout (intMEMOIR), allowed in situ reconstruction of lineage relationships in cultured mouse cells and flies. intMEMOIR uses an array of independent three-state genetic memory elements that can recombine stochastically and irreversibly, allowing up to 59,049 distinct digital states. It reconstructed lineage trees in stem cells and enabled simultaneous analysis of single-cell clonal history, spatial position, and gene expression in Drosophila brain sections. These results establish a foundation for microscopy-readable lineage recording and analysis in diverse systems.