scholarly journals Method of Microglial DNA-RNA Purification from a Single Brain of an Adult Mouse

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 86
Author(s):  
Md. Obayed Raihan ◽  
Brett A. McGregor ◽  
Nathan A. Velaris ◽  
Afrina Brishti ◽  
Junguk Hur ◽  
...  

Microglia, the resident brain immune effectors cells, show dynamic activation level changes for most neuropsychiatric diseases, reflecting their complex regulatory function and potential as a therapeutic target. Emerging single-cell molecular biology studies are used to investigate the genetic modification of individual cells to better understand complex gene regulatory pathways. Although multiple protocols for microglia isolation from adult mice are available, it is always challenging to get sufficient purified microglia from a single brain for simultaneous DNA and RNA extraction for subsequent downstream analysis. Moreover, for data comparison between treated and untreated groups, standardized cell isolation techniques are essential to decrease variability. Here, we present a combined method of microglia isolation from a single adult mouse brain, using a magnetic bead-based column separation technique, and a column-based extraction of purified DNA-RNA from the isolated microglia for downstream application. Our current method provides step-by-step instructions accompanied by visual explanations of important steps for isolating DNA-RNA simultaneously from a highly purified microglia population.

1987 ◽  
Vol 50 (12) ◽  
pp. 1013-1016 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANTOLIN L. REYES ◽  
CLIFFORD H. JOHNSON ◽  
PROCTER L. SPAULDING ◽  
GERARD N. STELMA

Lethal doses of 11 clinical and environmental isolates of Vibrio vulnificus were determined in suckling mice after oral challenge. With one exception, isolates that were virulent to iron-overloaded adult mice after intraperitoneal inoculation were highly lethal to the infant mice (>50% lethality at 105 CFU/mouse). The virulent isolate that failed to kill infant mice at 105 CFU had lost its invasiveness. Conditionally virulent isolates that were virulent only to simultaneously iron-overloaded and immunosuppressed adult mice required > 109 CFU to kill the infant mice. Avirulent isolates failed to kill at >109 CFU/mouse. There were no significant differences in the lethalities of clinical and environmental isolates. These findings demonstrated a close correlation between virulence in the iron-overloaded adult mouse and infectivity by the oral route.


1995 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 671-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
A E Sollbach ◽  
G E Wu

Diversity in immunoglobulin antigen receptors is generated in part by V(D)J recombination. In this process, different combinations of gene elements are joined in various configurations. Products of V(D)J recombination are coding joints, signal joints, and hybrid junctions, which are generated by deletion or inversion. To determine their role in the generation of diversity, we have examined two sorts of recombination products, coding joints and hybrid junctions, that have formed by inversion at the mouse immunoglobulin heavy-chain locus. We developed a PCR assay for quantification and characterization of inverted rearrangements of DH and JH gene elements. In primary cells from adult mice, inverted DJH rearrangements are detectable but they are rare. There were approximately 1,100 to 2,200 inverted DJH coding joints and inverted DJH hybrid junctions in the marrow of one adult mouse femur. On day 16 of gestation, inverted DJH rearrangements are more abundant. There are approximately 20,000 inverted DJH coding joints and inverted DJH hybrid junctions per day 16 fetal liver. In fetal liver cells, the number of inverted DJH rearrangements remains relatively constant from day 14 to day 16 of gestation. Inverted DJH rearrangements to JH4, the most 3' JH element, are more frequently detected than inverted DJH rearrangements to other JH elements. We compare the frequencies of inverted DJH rearrangements to previously determined frequencies of uninverted DJH rearrangements (DJH rearrangements formed by deletion). We suggest that inverted DJH rearrangements are influenced by V(D)J recombination mechanistic constraints and cellular selection.


2014 ◽  
Vol 67 (11) ◽  
pp. 923-931 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian A Cree ◽  
Zandra Deans ◽  
Marjolijn J L Ligtenberg ◽  
Nicola Normanno ◽  
Anders Edsjö ◽  
...  

Molecular testing is becoming an important part of the diagnosis of any patient with cancer. The challenge to laboratories is to meet this need, using reliable methods and processes to ensure that patients receive a timely and accurate report on which their treatment will be based. The aim of this paper is to provide minimum requirements for the management of molecular pathology laboratories. This general guidance should be augmented by the specific guidance available for different tumour types and tests. Preanalytical considerations are important, and careful consideration of the way in which specimens are obtained and reach the laboratory is necessary. Sample receipt and handling follow standard operating procedures, but some alterations may be necessary if molecular testing is to be performed, for instance to control tissue fixation. DNA and RNA extraction can be standardised and should be checked for quality and quantity of output on a regular basis. The choice of analytical method(s) depends on clinical requirements, desired turnaround time, and expertise available. Internal quality control, regular internal audit of the whole testing process, laboratory accreditation, and continual participation in external quality assessment schemes are prerequisites for delivery of a reliable service. A molecular pathology report should accurately convey the information the clinician needs to treat the patient with sufficient information to allow for correct interpretation of the result. Molecular pathology is developing rapidly, and further detailed evidence-based recommendations are required for many of the topics covered here.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. e1008944
Author(s):  
Qian Ke ◽  
Wikum Dinalankara ◽  
Laurent Younes ◽  
Donald Geman ◽  
Luigi Marchionni

Cancer cells display massive dysregulation of key regulatory pathways due to now well-catalogued mutations and other DNA-related aberrations. Moreover, enormous heterogeneity has been commonly observed in the identity, frequency and location of these aberrations across individuals with the same cancer type or subtype, and this variation naturally propagates to the transcriptome, resulting in myriad types of dysregulated gene expression programs. Many have argued that a more integrative and quantitative analysis of heterogeneity of DNA and RNA molecular profiles may be necessary for designing more systematic explorations of alternative therapies and improving predictive accuracy. We introduce a representation of multi-omics profiles which is sufficiently rich to account for observed heterogeneity and support the construction of quantitative, integrated, metrics of variation. Starting from the network of interactions existing in Reactome, we build a library of “paired DNA-RNA aberrations” that represent prototypical and recurrent patterns of dysregulation in cancer; each two-gene “Source-Target Pair” (STP) consists of a “source” regulatory gene and a “target” gene whose expression is plausibly “controlled” by the source gene. The STP is then “aberrant” in a joint DNA-RNA profile if the source gene is DNA-aberrant (e.g., mutated, deleted, or duplicated), and the downstream target gene is “RNA-aberrant”, meaning its expression level is outside the normal, baseline range. With M STPs, each sample profile has exactly one of the 2M possible configurations. We concentrate on subsets of STPs, and the corresponding reduced configurations, by selecting tissue-dependent minimal coverings, defined as the smallest family of STPs with the property that every sample in the considered population displays at least one aberrant STP within that family. These minimal coverings can be computed with integer programming. Given such a covering, a natural measure of cross-sample diversity is the extent to which the particular aberrant STPs composing a covering vary from sample to sample; this variability is captured by the entropy of the distribution over configurations. We apply this program to data from TCGA for six distinct tumor types (breast, prostate, lung, colon, liver, and kidney cancer). This enables an efficient simplification of the complex landscape observed in cancer populations, resulting in the identification of novel signatures of molecular alterations which are not detected with frequency-based criteria. Estimates of cancer heterogeneity across tumor phenotypes reveals a stable pattern: entropy increases with disease severity. This framework is then well-suited to accommodate the expanding complexity of cancer genomes and epigenomes emerging from large consortia projects.


1999 ◽  
Vol 27 (16) ◽  
pp. i-iii ◽  
Author(s):  
N. J. Coombs ◽  
A. C. Gough ◽  
J. N. Primrose

Blood ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 94 (8) ◽  
pp. 2613-2621 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elke Schneider ◽  
Géraldine Moreau ◽  
Anne Arnould ◽  
Florence Vasseur ◽  
Naushad Khodabaccus ◽  
...  

In this study, we examined the consequences of Fas deficiency on hematopoiesis in C57BL/6-lpr/lpr mice. We found a striking extramedullary increase in hematopoietic progenitor cells, comprising erythroid and nonerythroid lineages alike. These modifications preceded the lymphadenopathy, because early progenitors (colony-forming units-spleen [CFU-S] day 8) were already augmented in day-18 fetal livers of the lpr phenotype. Three weeks after birth, CFU-S increased in peripheral blood and spleen and colony-forming cells (CFU-C) began to accumulate 1 to 3 weeks later. Extramedullary myelopoiesis augmented progressively in Fas-deficient mice, reaching a maximum within 6 months. By then, mature and immature myeloid cells had infiltrated the spleen, the liver, and the peritoneal cavity. Similar changes occurred in C57BL/6-gld/gld mice, indicating that they resulted from Fas/FasL interactions. Medullary hematopoiesis was not significantly modified in adult mice of either strain. Yet, the incidence of CFU-S decreased after Fas cross-linking on normal bone marrow cells in the presence of interferon γ, consistent with a regulatory function of Fas/FasL interactions in early progenitor cell development. These data provide evidence that Fas deficiency can affect hematopoiesis both during adult and fetal life and that these modifications occur independently from other pathologies associated with the lpr phenotype.


1962 ◽  
Vol 115 (4) ◽  
pp. 745-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Martin Lerner ◽  
Howard S. Levin ◽  
Maxwell Finland

Mice varying in age from 1 day to 8 months were inoculated intraperitoneally with Coxsackie A virus, type 9 and studies were made of the quantity of virus in striated muscle and myocardium, the presence of neutralizing antibody in the serum, and the pathological changes in the tissues. The hind limbs of young (1- to 20-day-old) mice yielded high titers of virus and showed diffuse myositis, whereas only low yields of virus and focal myositis were obtained in older mice. In the 20-day-old mice the skeletal lesions were not accompanied by manifest symptoms and histologically showed evidence of regeneration progressing from the 3rd to the 11th day after inoculation. Older mice showed no symptoms and only focal myositis and low yields of virus were found in their hind limbs. Coxsackie A9 virus replicated to relatively low titers in the hearts of young (1- to 40-day-old) mice without producing any demonstrable lesions whereas frank myocarditis with high yields of virus were demonstrated in mice infected at 8 months of age. The data suggest that at least for the 2 strains used, the adult mouse should be considered susceptible to subclinical infection with Coxsackie A9 virus. Neither subclinical infection, nor antibody formation was demonstrable in young adult mice inoculated with a strain of Coxsackie A4 virus.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (8) ◽  
pp. 3590-3604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oressia Zalucki ◽  
Lachlan Harris ◽  
Tracey J Harvey ◽  
Danyon Harkins ◽  
Jocelyn Widagdo ◽  
...  

Abstract Understanding the migration of newborn neurons within the brain presents a major challenge in contemporary biology. Neuronal migration is widespread within the developing brain but is also important within the adult brain. For instance, stem cells within the ventricular–subventricular zone (V-SVZ) and the subgranular zone of dentate gyrus of the adult rodent brain produce neuroblasts that migrate to the olfactory bulb and granule cell layer of the dentate gyrus, respectively, where they regulate key brain functions including innate olfactory responses, learning, and memory. Critically, our understanding of the factors mediating neuroblast migration remains limited. The transcription factor nuclear factor I X (NFIX) has previously been implicated in embryonic cortical development. Here, we employed conditional ablation of Nfix from the adult mouse brain and demonstrated that the removal of this gene from either neural stem and progenitor cells, or neuroblasts, within the V-SVZ culminated in neuroblast migration defects. Mechanistically, we identified aberrant neuroblast branching, due in part to increased expression of the guanylyl cyclase natriuretic peptide receptor 2 (Npr2), as a factor contributing to abnormal migration in Nfix-deficient adult mice. Collectively, these data provide new insights into how neuroblast migration is regulated at a transcriptional level within the adult brain.


Viruses ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steffen Klein ◽  
Thorsten G. Müller ◽  
Dina Khalid ◽  
Vera Sonntag-Buck ◽  
Anke-Mareil Heuser ◽  
...  

Rapid large-scale testing is essential for controlling the ongoing pandemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The standard diagnostic pipeline for testing SARS-CoV-2 presence in patients with an ongoing infection is predominantly based on pharyngeal swabs, from which the viral RNA is extracted using commercial kits, followed by reverse transcription and quantitative PCR detection. As a result of the large demand for testing, commercial RNA extraction kits may be limited and, alternatively, non-commercial protocols are needed. Here, we provide a magnetic bead RNA extraction protocol that is predominantly based on in-house made reagents and is performed in 96-well plates supporting large-scale testing. Magnetic bead RNA extraction was benchmarked against the commercial QIAcube extraction platform. Comparable viral RNA detection sensitivity and specificity were obtained by fluorescent and colorimetric reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) using a primer set targeting the N gene, as well as RT-qPCR using a primer set targeting the E gene, showing that the RNA extraction protocol presented here can be combined with a variety of detection methods at high throughput. Importantly, the presented diagnostic workflow can be quickly set up in a laboratory without access to an automated pipetting robot.


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