Past Issue in 2012

Volume: 2, Issue: 5

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Cancer Biology

Scratch Wound Healing Assay

Scratch Wound Healing Assay

YC Yanling Chen
123905 Views
Mar 5, 2012
The scratch wound healing assay has been widely adapted and modified to study the effects of a variety of experimental conditions, for instance, gene knockdown or chemical exposure, on mammalian cell migration and proliferation. In a typical scratch wound healing assay, a “wound gap” in a cell monolayer is created by scratching, and the “healing” of this gap by cell migration and growth towards the center of the gap is monitored and often quantitated. Factors that alter the motility and/or growth of the cells can lead to increased or decreased rate of “healing” of the gap (Lampugnani, 1999). This assay is simple, inexpensive, and experimental conditions can be easily adjusted for different purposes. The assay can also be used for a high-throughput screen platform if an automated system is used (Yarrow and Perlman, 2004).

Cell Biology

Collecting and Fixing Nuclear GFP/RFP in L1 Larva for Imaging

Collecting and Fixing Nuclear GFP/RFP in L1 Larva for Imaging

Xiao Liu Xiao Liu
10953 Views
Mar 5, 2012
In this protocol, L1 stage larvae are collected that carry nuclear-localized GFP/wCherry reporters. These can be fixed so that the GFP/wCherry maintains nuclear localization and stain nuclei by DAPI. This protocol therefore achieves the collection and fixation of nuclei in worm L1 larvae.

Microbiology

Amplification of HIV-1 Infectious Virus in BL3 Lab

Amplification of HIV-1 Infectious Virus in BL3 Lab

Xin Wang Xin Wang
12717 Views
Mar 5, 2012
This method is used for making high titer human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) virus stock for subsequent infection assays. The amplification of T-tropic HIV-1 virus (IIIB strain) uses the CD4+ T cell line H9.

Systems Biology

Probing Yeast Protein Microarrays for Protein-protein Interactions Using V5-epitope Tagged Fusion Protein Probes

Probing Yeast Protein Microarrays for Protein-protein Interactions Using V5-epitope Tagged Fusion Protein Probes

JF Joseph Fasolo
MS Michael Snyder
13254 Views
Mar 5, 2012
Protein microarray is probably the only technique currently available for systematic investigation of protein-protein interactions. This protocol describes an optimized method to probe yeast protein microarrays for protein-protein interactions using purified V5-epitope tagged fusion protein. It should also apply to any other proteins with appropriate modifications.