ISSN:
1573-6822
Keywords:
β-imager
;
[35S]methionine incorporation
;
primary cultures
;
rat CNS cells
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
,
Medicine
Notes:
Abstract Mixed glial–neuronal cultures prepared from rat embryonic cortical cells were either treated with aracytosine or infected with an adenovirus encoding the Lac-Z gene according to two protocols of infection. In each experiment, 24 h before the end of the incubation period, [35S]methionine was added to one set of cultures which were performed in plastic chamber slides. At 10–13 days in vitro, control and treated cultures were processed either for immunocytochemical detection of neuron-specific enolase (NSE)-stained cells or for measurement of [35S]methionine incorporation. For the latter, cultures grown in the chamber slides were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, dehydrated, and air-dried. After removal of the upper structures of the chambers, the slides were directly transferred to a 1200 β-imager, a gaseous detector which displays a digital image of the cultured cells and permits the quantitative measurement of incorporated [35S]methionine within a few hours. In aracytosine-treated cultures, we observed that the numbers of NSE(+) cells as well as [35S]methionine incorporation were decreased compared with control cultures. After viral infection, the number of NSE(+) neurons and the amount of radioactivity incorporated were either the same in control and infected cultures or decreased for the cultures treated according to the different protocols. In all cases, the amount of [35S]methionine incorporated varied in the same direction as the number of NSE(+) neurons in cultures. The digital imaging of the cultures permitted observation of the layer of cultured cells. It appears that such a rapid and direct measurement of incorporation of a radiolabeled indicator of protein synthesis may be considered as a quick and reliable marker of cell survival and/or proliferation.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1007537824691
Permalink