Genetically encoded assembly recorder temporally resolves cellular history

Nature
by Yuqing Yan
March 4, 2026
Cells constantly change their molecular state in response to internal and external cues1. Mapping cellular activity in tissues with spatiotemporal precision is essential for understanding organ physiology, pathology, and regenerative processes. Current cell-sensing modalities primarily rely on either endpoint analysis that takes static snapshots, or real-time sensing that monitors a small subset of cells3,4. Here, we introduce Granularly Expanding Memory for Intracellular Narrative Integration (GEMINI), an in cellulo recording platform that leverages a computationally designed protein assembly as an intracellular memory device to record the history of individual cells. GEMINI grows predictably within live cells, capturing cellular events as tree-ring-like fluorescent patterns for imaging-based retrospective readout. Absolute chronological information of activity histories is attainable with hour-level accuracy. GEMINI effectively maps differential NFκB-mediated transcriptional changes, resolving fast dynamics of 15 minutes and providing quantifiable signal amplitudes. In a xenograft model, GEMINI records inflammation-induced signaling dynamics across tissue, revealing spatial heterogeneity linked to vascular density. When expressed in the mouse brain, GEMINI minimally impacts neuronal functions and can resolve both transcriptional changes and activity patterns of neurons. Together, GEMINI provides a robust and generalizable means for spatiotemporal mapping of cell dynamics underlying physiological and pathological processes in both culture and intact tissues.
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Originally published on Nature on 3/4/2026
Genetically encoded assembly recorder temporally resolves cellular history