Search results for "Cell sorting"

showing 10 items of 31 documents

MicroRNA and Cardiac Stem Cell Therapy

2012

Cardiac Progenitor Cells (CPCs) are multipotent cells of the myocardium. They are located inside niches of the heart muscle, can be isolated, characterized and used for cardiac regeneration in stem cell therapy. Actually, CPCs may be isolated by tissue digestion with or without cell sorting, but it is difficult to achieve the maximum level of differentiation when these cells are implanted into a damaged myocardium. The knowledge recently acquired on small molecules of non-coding RNAs, microRNA (miRNA), may improve the use of these cells in stem cell therapy. In fact, these small molecules may be attached to devices or adminstered as they are or in combination with nanoparticles in order to …

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHeart developmentmicroRNASettore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaRegeneration (biology)medicine.medical_treatmentCardiac muscleEpigeneticReprogrammingStem-cell therapyCell sortingBiologyCell biologyEndothelial stem cellCardiac stem cellmedicine.anatomical_structuremedicineStem cellCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineReprogrammingHeart regeneration
researchProduct

Experimental studies on the suitability of human mesothelial cells for seeding vascular prostheses: shear stress resistance in vitro

1996

This investigation forms part of a study on the suitability of human omentum mesothelial cells (HOMES) as an alternative to endothelial cells (EC) for seeding vascular grafts. Isolated HOMES were grown in primary culture and characterized by their morphology (light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM)), as well as by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) and immunocytochemistry. The latter two methods showed cells which were positive for smooth muscle-type actin and cytokeratin, but negative for factor VIII-related antigen. HOMES were grown to confluence on glass with or without a fibronectin coating. Controlled shear stress was applied for up to 30 min using a plate and c…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMaterials sciencebiologyImmunocytochemistryBiomedical EngineeringBiophysicsBioengineeringVideo microscopyCell sortingIn vitroBiomaterialsFibronectinCytoplasmbiology.proteinBiophysicsmedicineMesothelial CellActinJournal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine
researchProduct

Lentiviral transduction of face and limb flaps: implications for immunomodulation of vascularized composite allografts.

2012

Background Ex vivo introduction of an immunomodulatory transgene into a face or hand allograft may improve the risk-to-benefit ratio of vascularized composite allografts. Abrogation of the immunogenicity of the skin component of a face or hand allograft may decrease alloreactivity and permit the induction of immunologic tolerance. Proof-of-principle demonstrations of transduction of composite tissue have been established using adenoviral vectors, producing transient gene expression. The authors hypothesized that transduction, integration, and long-term expression of transgenes in a vascularized composite allograft could be achieved using lentiviral vectors. Methods Ex vivo transduction of h…

Reporter genePathologymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryTransgeneLentivirusGene Transfer TechniquesExtremitiesTransfectionCell sortingSurgical FlapsViral vectorRatsImmunomodulationTransduction (genetics)Transduction GeneticFaceCancer researchMedicineAnimalsHumansSurgeryIntradermal injectionbusinessEx vivoPlastic and reconstructive surgery
researchProduct

Identification and purification of human erythroid progenitor cells by monoclonal antibody to the transferrin receptor (T� 67)

1988

Anti-TU 67 is a murine monoclonal antibody that recognizes the transferrin receptor. With respect to hematopoietic cells TU 67 is expressed by human multipotent colony-forming cells (CFU-Mix), erythroid progenitor cells (BFU-E and CFU-E) and a fraction of granulocyte/monocyte colony forming cells, but is not expressed by mature hematopoietic cells including erythrocytes, platelets, lymphocytes, and peripheral blood myeloid cells. The TU 67-positive fraction of normal bone marrow, separated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) or immune rosettes, contained 87% of the erythroid progenitor cells. Erythroid progenitor cells were enriched up to 50-fold by using a combination of monoclon…

Rosette FormationErythroblastsmedicine.drug_classMonocyteAntibodies MonoclonalFluorescent Antibody TechniqueTransferrin receptorCell SeparationHematologyGeneral MedicineCell sortingBiologyFlow CytometryMonoclonal antibodyMolecular biologyHaematopoiesismedicine.anatomical_structurehemic and lymphatic diseasesReceptors TransferrinMonoclonalmedicinebiology.proteinAntibodyInterleukin 3Blut
researchProduct

Mechanics and self-organization in tissue development

2021

Self-organization is an all-important feature of living systems that provides the means to achieve specialization and functionality at distinct spatio-temporal scales. Herein, we review this concept by addressing the packing organization of cells, the sorting/compartmentalization phenomenon of cell populations, and the propagation of organizing cues at the tissue level through traveling waves. We elaborate on how different theoretical models and tools from Topology, Physics, and Dynamical Systems have improved the understanding of self-organization by shedding light on the role played by mechanics as a driver of morphogenesis. Altogether, by providing a historical perspective, we show how i…

Self-organizationPhysicsSelf-organizationTraveling wavesDynamical systems theoryCell packingSortingCompartmentalization (information security)Cell BiologyMechanicsDevelopmental mechanismsLiving systemsCell sortingERKPhenomenonDevelopmental mechanicsSpecialization (functional)MorphogenesisHumansEpitheliaTopology (chemistry)Developmental BiologySignal Transduction
researchProduct

Efficient selection of silenced primary cells by flow cytometry

2007

Background: RNA interference has emerged as a new and potent tool to knockdown the expression of target genes and to investigate their functions. For short time experiments with mammalian cell lines, RNA interference is typically induced by transfecting small interfering RNAs (siRNAs). Primary cells constitute important experimental systems in many studies because of their similarity to their in vivo counterparts; however, transfection of these cells has been found to be difficult. As a consequence, RNA interference of primary cells may result in mixed phenotypes because of the simultaneous presence in the same preparation of transfected and nontransfected cells. This may be particularly in…

Small interfering RNAHistologyfluorescent siRNAsCell SeparationBiologyTransfectionPathology and Forensic MedicineFlow cytometryRNA interferencemedicineHumansTrypsinGene SilencingRNA Small InterferingGeneCells CulturedGene knockdownMessenger RNAmedicine.diagnostic_testCell BiologyTransfectionCell sortingFlow CytometryMolecular biologyMicroscopy FluorescencemRNA knocking-down in fibroblastsRNAiCytometry Part A
researchProduct

In vitro differentiation of E-N-CAM expressing rat neural precursor cells isolated by FACS during prenatal development

1994

Most fetal rat brain cells expressing the embryonal, highly sialylated form of the cell adhesion molecule N-CAM (E-N-CAM) are precursor cells, as judged from the absence of marker molecules specific for mature neural cell types. However, the detection of E-N-CAM+ cells in frozen sections does not provide information on the lineage-specific differentiation of these cells during development. To investigate their differentiation behaviour in vitro, E-N-CAM+ cells were isolated at different times of brain development by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), using a monoclonal antibody (Mab RB21-7) which specifically recognizes polysialic acid (PSA) residues on E-N-CAM. Double-immunofluore…

animal structuresPolysialic acidCell adhesion moleculeBiologyCell sortingCell biologyCellular and Molecular Neurosciencemedicine.anatomical_structureCell culturePrecursor cellImmunologymedicineProgenitor cellAstrocyteGliogenesisJournal of Neuroscience Research
researchProduct

Apoptotic-like Leishmania exploit the host´s autophagy machinery to reduce T-cell-mediated parasite elimination

2015

Apoptosis is a well-defined cellular process in which a cell dies, characterized by cell shrinkage and DNA fragmentation. In parasites like Leishmania, the process of apoptosis-like cell death has been described. Moreover upon infection, the apoptotic-like population is essential for disease development, in part by silencing host phagocytes. Nevertheless, the exact mechanism of how apoptosis in unicellular organisms may support infectivity remains unclear. Therefore we investigated the fate of apoptotic-like Leishmania parasites in human host macrophages. Our data showed--in contrast to viable parasites--that apoptotic-like parasites enter an LC3(+), autophagy-like compartment. The compartm…

log.ph logarithmic phaseT-LymphocytesApoptosisMACS magnetic-associated cell sortingMacrophageMFI mean fluorescence intensityLeishmaniasisMOI multiplicity of infectionanti-inflammatoryLeishmaniaeducation.field_of_studyPhagocytesCFSE carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl esterTGFB transforming growth factorAcquired immune systemapoptotic-like LeishmaniaPS phosphatidylserinehuman primary macrophagesCell biologyβ; TT tetanus toxoidCorrigendumProgrammed cell deathautophagyPopulationAntigen presentationANXA5 annexin VBasic Science Research PapersBiologyPhagocytosisCM complete mediumMAP1LC3/LC3 microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3AnimalsHumansMHC major histocompatibility complexIF immunofluorescenceeducationMolecular Biologyimmune evasionPBMCs peripheral blood mononuclear cellsT-cell proliferationIntracellular parasiteMacrophagesstat.ph stationary phaseAutophagyLm LeishmaniaCell BiologyLeishmaniabiology.organism_classificationIL interleukinLAP LC3-associated phagocytosisLAPhMDM human monocyte derived macrophageAutophagy
researchProduct

Isolation of Central Nervous System (CNS) Infiltrating Cells

2014

Leukocyte infiltration of the central nervous system (CNS) occurs under certain pathogenic conditions and most often results in severe disorders. Therefore, the isolation and analysis of such infiltrating cell populations is necessary for elucidating the underlying pathogenic mechanisms. Here we describe a simple and straightforward protocol for cell isolation from the inflamed CNS, which combines mechanical dissociation and enzymatic degradation of the tissue. Additionally, purification by Percoll gradient centrifugation provides a great yield of the infiltrating material. The isolated cells can be further used for downstream applications such as cell sorting, cellular or molecular analysi…

medicine.anatomical_structureChemistryCellCentral nervous systemmedicinePercoll gradient centrifugationCell isolationCell sortingmedicine.diseaseInfiltration (medical)Molecular analysisCell biologyEnzymatic degradation
researchProduct

Stress hormones promote growth of B16-F10 melanoma metastases: an interleukin 6- and glutathione-dependent mechanism

2013

[EN] Background: Interleukin (IL)-6 (mainly of tumor origin) activates glutathione (GSH) release from hepatocytes and its interorgan transport to B16-F10 melanoma metastatic foci. We studied if this capacity to overproduce IL-6 is regulated by cancer cell-independent mechanisms. Methods: Murine B16-F10 melanoma cells were cultured, transfected with red fluorescent protein, injected i.v. into syngenic C57BL/6J mice to generate lung and liver metastases, and isolated from metastatic foci using high-performance cell sorting. Stress hormones and IL-6 levels were measured by ELISA, and CRH expression in the brain by in situ hybridization. DNA binding activity of NF-kappa B, CREB, AP-1, and NF-IL…

medicine.medical_specialtyTranscription GeneticMelanoma ExperimentalInterleukin 6ApoptosisEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayIn situ hybridizationBiologyMetastasesCREBReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyFlow cytometryMiceNorepinephrineAdrenocorticotropic HormoneInternal medicineCell Line TumormedicineAnimalsNeoplasm MetastasisIn Situ HybridizationMedicine(all)medicine.diagnostic_testBase SequenceBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology(all)Interleukin-6ResearchStress hormonesInterleukinGeneral MedicineTransfectionCell sortingMolecular biologyGlutathionehumanitiesEndocrinologyElectroporationApoptosisbiology.proteinCorticosteroneDNA ProbesHormoneTranscription FactorsJournal of Translational Medicine
researchProduct