Sungmin Son
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Sungmin Son.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Sangwon Byun; Sungmin Son; Dario Amodei; Nathan Cermak; Josephine Shaw; Joon Ho Kang; Vivian C. Hecht; Monte M. Winslow; Tyler Jacks; Parag Mallick; Scott R. Manalis
Metastasis requires the penetration of cancer cells through tight spaces, which is mediated by the physical properties of the cells as well as their interactions with the confined environment. Various microfluidic approaches have been devised to mimic traversal in vitro by measuring the time required for cells to pass through a constriction. Although a cell’s passage time is expected to depend on its deformability, measurements from existing approaches are confounded by a cells size and its frictional properties with the channel wall. Here, we introduce a device that enables the precise measurement of (i) the size of a single cell, given by its buoyant mass, (ii) the velocity of the cell entering a constricted microchannel (entry velocity), and (iii) the velocity of the cell as it transits through the constriction (transit velocity). Changing the deformability of the cell by perturbing its cytoskeleton primarily alters the entry velocity, whereas changing the surface friction by immobilizing positive charges on the constrictions walls primarily alters the transit velocity, indicating that these parameters can give insight into the factors affecting the passage of each cell. When accounting for cell buoyant mass, we find that cells possessing higher metastatic potential exhibit faster entry velocities than cells with lower metastatic potential. We additionally find that some cell types with higher metastatic potential exhibit greater than expected changes in transit velocities, suggesting that not only the increased deformability but reduced friction may be a factor in enabling invasive cancer cells to efficiently squeeze through tight spaces.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Francisco Feijó Delgado; Nathan Cermak; Vivian C. Hecht; Sungmin Son; Yingzhong Li; Scott M. Knudsen; Selim Olcum; John M. Higgins; Jianzhu Chen; William H. Grover; Scott R. Manalis
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.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2015
Sungmin Son; Joon Ho Kang; Seungeun Oh; Marc W. Kirschner; Timothy J. Mitchison; Scott R. Manalis
Suspended cells transiently increase their volume during mitosis because of ion exchange through the plasma membrane.
Analytical Chemistry | 2008
Sungmin Son; William H. Grover; Thomas P. Burg; Scott R. Manalis
Universal detectors that maintain high sensitivity as the detection volume is reduced to the subnanoliter scale can enhance the utility of miniaturized total analysis systems (mu-TAS). Here the unique scaling properties of the suspended microchannel resonator (SMR) are exploited to show universal detection in a 10 pL analysis volume with a density detection limit of approximately 1 microg/cm (3) (10 Hz bandwidth) and a dynamic range of 6 decades. Analytes with low UV extinction coefficients such as polyethylene glycol (PEG) 8 kDa, glucose, and glycine are measured with molar detection limits of 0.66, 13.5, and 31.6 microM, respectively. To demonstrate the potential for real-time monitoring, gel filtration chromatography was used to separate different molecular weights of PEG as the SMR acquired a chromatogram by measuring the eluate density. This work suggests that the SMR could offer a simple and sensitive universal detector for various separation systems from liquid chromatography to capillary electrophoresis. Moreover, since the SMR is itself a microfluidic channel, it can be directly integrated into mu-TAS without compromising overall performance.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Sungmin Son; Mark M. Stevens; Hui Xiao Chao; Carson C. Thoreen; Aaron M. Hosios; Lawrence D. Schweitzer; Yao-Chung Weng; Kris C. Wood; David M. Sabatini; Matthew G. Vander Heiden; Scott R. Manalis
The coordination of metabolic processes to allow increased nutrient uptake and utilization for macromolecular synthesis is central for cell growth. Although studies of bulk cell populations have revealed important metabolic and signaling requirements that impact cell growth on long time scales, whether the same regulation influences short-term cell growth remains an open question. Here we investigate cell growth by monitoring mass accumulation of mammalian cells while rapidly depleting particular nutrients. Within minutes following the depletion of glucose or glutamine, we observe a growth reduction that is larger than the mass accumulation rate of the nutrient. This indicates that if one particular nutrient is depleted, the cell rapidly adjusts the amount that other nutrients are accumulated, which is consistent with cooperative nutrient accumulation. Population measurements of nutrient sensing pathways involving mTOR, AKT, ERK, PKA, MST1, or AMPK, or pro-survival pathways involving autophagy suggest that they do not mediate this growth reduction. Furthermore, the protein synthesis rate does not change proportionally to the mass accumulation rate over these time scales, suggesting that intracellular metabolic pools buffer the growth response. Our findings demonstrate that cell growth can be regulated over much shorter time scales than previously appreciated.
Nature Methods | 2010
Michel Godin; Francisco Feijó Delgado; Sungmin Son; William H. Grover; Andrea K. Bryan; Amit Tzur; Paul Jorgensen; Kris Payer; Alan D. Grossman; Marc W. Kirschner; Scott R. Manalis
Lab on a Chip | 2011
Yao-Chung Weng; Francisco Feijó Delgado; Sungmin Son; Thomas P. Burg; Steven Charles Wasserman; Scott R. Manalis
Archive | 2009
Scott R. Manalis; Andrea K. Bryan; Philip Dextras; Thomas P. Burg; William H. Grover; Yao-Chung Weng; Sungmin Son
Lab on a Chip | 2012
Josephine Shaw; Kristofor Robert Payer; Sungmin Son; William H. Grover; Scott R. Manalis
Archive | 2010
Scott R. Manalis; Andrea K. Bryan; Michel Godin; Philip Dextras; Sungmin Son; Thomas P. Burg; William H. Grover; Yao-Chung Weng