Literature DB >> 21609701

Fully automated microinjection system for Xenopus laevis oocytes with integrated sorting and collection.

Siegfried F Graf1, Thierry Madigou, Ruoya Li, Christophe Chesné, Andreas Stemmer, Helmut F Knapp.   

Abstract

Microinjection is the most flexible transfection method in terms of choice of reagents to inject into cells. But this method lacks the high throughput to compete with less flexible methods like chemical- or viral-based approaches. Various approaches have been pursued to increase the throughput by automating the microinjection process. However, these approaches focused solely on the microinjection itself and disregarded the tasks before and after the injection, which also belong to the critical time path of the whole process, that is, sorting out viable cells from a cell suspension, placing the cell for injection, and collecting the cell after the injection. In the approach with our XenoFactor, we demonstrate a system capable of running the whole process automatically. By optimizing the XenoFactor for Xenopus laevis oocytes, we could demonstrate the successful automated injection. Starting from a suspension with a mixture of defolliculated oocytes at different stages and quality levels, the manual approach requires 1 day in total for the preparation of 400 microinjected oocytes. The XenoFactor takes only 4h for the same amount and delivers injected oocytes of reproducible quality and without the fatigue symptoms experienced during the manual approach.
Copyright © 2011 Society for Laboratory Automation and Screening. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21609701     DOI: 10.1016/j.jala.2011.03.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Lab Autom        ISSN: 2211-0682


  5 in total

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Review 2.  Physical methods for intracellular delivery: practical aspects from laboratory use to industrial-scale processing.

Authors:  J Mark Meacham; Kiranmai Durvasula; F Levent Degertekin; Andrei G Fedorov
Journal:  J Lab Autom       Date:  2013-06-27

Review 3.  Using Xenopus oocytes in neurological disease drug discovery.

Authors:  Steven L Zeng; Leland C Sudlow; Mikhail Y Berezin
Journal:  Expert Opin Drug Discov       Date:  2019-11-01       Impact factor: 6.098

4.  Fluorescence-Based Measurements of Membrane-Bound Angiotensin Converting Enzyme 2 Activity Using Xenopus Laevis Oocytes.

Authors:  Luise Fast; Richard Ågren; Hugo Zeberg
Journal:  Biosensors (Basel)       Date:  2022-08-04

5.  Direct and sustained intracellular delivery of exogenous molecules using acoustic-transfection with high frequency ultrasound.

Authors:  Sangpil Yoon; Min Gon Kim; Chi Tat Chiu; Jae Youn Hwang; Hyung Ham Kim; Yingxiao Wang; K Kirk Shung
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-02-04       Impact factor: 4.379

  5 in total

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