scholarly journals Programmable DNA Framework Sensors for In Situ Cell-Surface pH Analysis

2021 ◽  
Vol 93 (36) ◽  
pp. 12170-12174
Author(s):  
Jingxin Liu ◽  
Weiwu Li ◽  
Rongsong Li ◽  
Xiuzhao Yin ◽  
Shiliang He ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (12) ◽  
pp. 3682
Author(s):  
Katarína Vizárová ◽  
Izabela Vajová ◽  
Naďa Krivoňáková ◽  
Radko Tiňo ◽  
Zdenko Takáč ◽  
...  

The surface pH is a critical factor in the quality and longevity of materials and products. Traditional fast colorimetric pH detection-based tests such as water quality control or pregnancy tests, when results are determined by the naked eye, cannot provide quantitative values. Using standard pH papers, paper-printed comparison charts, or colorimetric microfluidic paper-based analytical devices is not suitable for such technological applications and quality management systems (QMSs) where the particular tested material should contain a suitable indicator in situ, in its structure, either before or after the process, the technology or the apparatus that are being tested. This paper describes a method based on the combination of impregnation of a tested material with a pH indicator in situ, its exposure to a process of technology whose impact on pH value is to be tested, colorimetric pH measurement, and approximation of pH value using derived pH characteristic parameters (pH-CPs) based on CIE orthogonal and cylindrical color variables. The hypotheses were experimentally verified using the methyl red pH indicator, impregnating the acid lignin-containing paper, and preparing a calibration sample set with pH in the range 4 to 12 using controlled alkalization. Based on the performed measurements and statistical evaluation, it can be concluded that the best pH-CPs with the highest regression parameters for pH are √∆E, ln (a),√∆H (ab), a/L, h/b and ln (b/a). The experimental results show that the presented method allows a good estimation of pH detection of the material surfaces.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 1518
Author(s):  
Maria Qatato ◽  
Vaishnavi Venugopalan ◽  
Alaa Al-Hashimi ◽  
Maren Rehders ◽  
Aaron D. Valentine ◽  
...  

Trace amine-associated receptor 1 (rodent Taar1/human TAAR1) is a G protein-coupled receptor that is mainly recognized for its functions in neuromodulation. Previous in vitro studies suggested that Taar1 may signal from intracellular compartments. However, we have shown Taar1 to localize apically and on ciliary extensions in rodent thyrocytes, suggesting that at least in the thyroid, Taar1 may signal from the cilia at the apical plasma membrane domain of thyrocytes in situ, where it is exposed to the content of the follicle lumen containing putative Taar1 ligands. This study was designed to explore mouse Taar1 (mTaar1) trafficking, heterologously expressed in human and rat thyroid cell lines in order to establish an in vitro system in which Taar1 signaling from the cell surface can be studied in future. The results showed that chimeric mTaar1-EGFP traffics to the apical cell surface and localizes particularly to spherical structures of polarized thyroid cells, procilia, and primary cilia upon serum-starvation. Moreover, mTaar1-EGFP appears to form high molecular mass forms, possibly homodimers and tetramers, in stably expressing human thyroid cell lines. However, only monomeric mTaar1-EGFP was cell surface biotinylated in polarized human thyrocytes. In polarized rat thyrocytes, mTaar1-EGFP is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum, while cilia were reached by mTaar1-EGFP transiently co-expressed in combination with an HA-tagged construct of the related mTaar5. We conclude that Taar1 trafficking to cilia depends on their integrity. The results further suggest that an in vitro cell model was established that recapitulates Taar1 trafficking in thyrocytes in situ, in principle, and will enable studying Taar1 signaling in future, thus extending our general understanding of its potential significance for thyroid autoregulation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nageswari Yarravarapu ◽  
Rohit Sai Reddy Konada ◽  
Narek Darabedian ◽  
Nichole J. Pedowtiz ◽  
Soumya N. Krishnamurthy ◽  
...  

Glycan binding often mediates extracellular macromolecular recognition events. Accurate characterization of these binding interactions can be difficult because of dissociation and scrambling that occur during purification and analysis steps. Use of photocrosslinking methods has been pursued to covalently capture glycan-dependent interactions in situ however use of metabolic glycan engineering methods to incorporate photocrosslinking sugar analogs is limited to certain cell types. Here we report an exo-enzymatic labeling method to add a diazirine-modified sialic acid (SiaDAz) to cell surface glycoconjugates. The method involves chemoenzymatic synthesis of diazirine-modified CMP-sialic acid (CMP-SiaDAz), followed by sialyltransferase-catalyzed addition of SiaDAz to desialylated cell surfaces. Cell surface SiaDAz-ylation is compatible with multiple cell types and is facilitated by endogenous extracellular sialyltransferase activity present in Daudi B cells. This method for extracellular addition of α2-6-linked SiaDAz enables UV-induced crosslinking of CD22, demonstrating the utility for covalent capture of glycan-mediated binding interactions.


Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 67 (5) ◽  
pp. 1257-1264 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Andreesen ◽  
KJ Bross ◽  
J Osterholz ◽  
F Emmrich

We have analyzed the expression of late differentiation antigens during terminal in vitro maturation of human macrophages (M phi) from blood monocytes (MO) in comparison to their distribution among mature M phi residing in various tissue sites. By immunizing mice with M phi derived from blood MO by culture on hydrophobic Teflon foils, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were developed (MAX.1, MAX.2, MAX.3, MAX.11) that reacted with lineage-restricted differentiation antigens. These antigens were expressed exclusively on M phi or were markedly increased after in vitro differentiation. The only overlap to another hemopoietic cell lineage was observed with MAX.3, which is shared by platelets and megakaryocytes. In the course of M phi maturation in vitro, the MAX.1 and MAX.3 antigens are detected within the cytoplasm two days before they appear on the cell surface. In contrast, the MAX.11 antigen is expressed simultaneously in the cytoplasm and at the cell surface, is found in varying degrees on a minor portion of blood MO and U937 cells, and is expressed rapidly at high density during early M phi differentiation in vitro. Among conventional mAbs that do not react with MO we found those against the transferrin (TF)-receptor, the BA-2, and the PCA1 antigen to label M phi. M phi matured in vivo and isolated from body fluids were positive with some but not all MAX mAbs. Distinctive patterns were observed with pulmonary M phi, exudate M phi from pleural and peritoneal effusions, synovial fluids, and early lactation milk. M phi from the alveolar space, for example, constantly expressed the MAX.2 antigen but not the MAX.3 antigen. Pleural effusion M phi, however, did not react with the MAX.1 mAb, but in most cases, it did react with the MAX.3 mAb. The detection of novel differentiation antigens, all expressed on monocyte-derived M phi but differently expressed on site-specific M phi in situ, underlines the remarkable heterogeneity among human M phi. The expression of these antigens is flexible because those MAX antigens that were not expressed in situ could be induced if cells from distinct tissue sites were cultured in vitro for several days. MAX mAbs may be of potential value to study both the sequential stages of maturation within the M phi lineage as well as differential developments induced by various culture conditions in parallel to environmental factors in vivo.


1989 ◽  
Vol 256 (4) ◽  
pp. G689-G697
Author(s):  
A. Anteunis ◽  
A. Astesano ◽  
B. Portha ◽  
G. Hejblum ◽  
G. Rosselin

We perfused the pancreas with 125I-labeled vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) to follow the concomitant distribution of radioactivity in beta- and acinar cells as a function of time. This distribution was quantitated by computer-assisted analysis of high-resolution video autoradiographs. Density labeling was expressed as normalized specific activity (disintegration density per volume density). Immediately after a 4-min perfusion of 125I-VIP, labeling in beta-cells was mainly concentrated on the cell surface and peripheral tubules and vesicles. After three 30-s pulses of 125I-VIP, separated by intervals of 3.5 min of buffer perfusion, lysosome-like structures were heavily labeled. When VIP internalization was prolonged, labeling was similar to that observed with the 4-min perfusion, indicating a high VIP disposal rate in the lysosome-like structures. In acinar cells, labeling persisted on the surface and the early vacuolar system. We conclude the following: 1) an active endocytotic system, linked to the transport and sorting of a neuromediator, is present in beta-cells; and 2) the differences between the distribution of labeling in acinar and beta-cells suggest that the regulation of VIP internalization is tissue specific.


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