| Literature DB >> 22805280 |
Sven Fengler1, Philippe I H Bastiaens, Hernán E Grecco, Pedro Roda-Navarro.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cellular responses emerge from a complex network of dynamic biochemical reactions. In order to investigate them is necessary to develop methods that allow perturbing a high number of gene products in a flexible and fast way. Cell arrays (CA) enable such experiments on microscope slides via reverse transfection of cellular colonies growing on spotted genetic material. In contrast to multi-well plates, CA are susceptible to contamination among neighboring spots hindering accurate quantification in cell-based screening projects. Here we have developed a quality control protocol for quantifying and minimizing contamination in CA.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22805280 PMCID: PMC3541979 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-5-358
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Figure 1Reduction of interspot contamination in HeLa cell arrays. (a) Picture of a spotted LabTek chamber. Schematic of locations of plasmids encoding for mCitrine and mCherry (green and red spots), and unspotted (empty) areas are shown in the lower panel. Contaminants expressing the opposite fluorescent protein in mCitrine/mCherry spots or in unspotted areas are shown in the right schematic. (b) and (c) Montage of fields (spots or empty areas) of half arrays containing mCitrine/mCherry-expressing HeLa cells. 20 min after cell seeding a wash step was included in (c) but not in (b). Reverse transfection time is indicated. Right panels show magnifications of representative spots.
Figure 2Quantitative analysis of array accuracy. (a) Schematic representation of automated image analysis. Schematic of the module built pipeline created with Cell Profiler software to calculate the numbers of mCitrine and mCherry expressing cells in mCitrine spots. Thresholds for mCitrine and mCherry channels were applied as described in methods. The total number of cells was calculated by identifying primary objects by using a nuclei staining. The threshold images of mCitrine or mCherry were used with the primary objects to identify mCitrine and mCherry expressing cells (secondary objects). The white arrow shows one of the interspot contaminating cells. (b) and (c) The percentage of mCitrine expressing cells was calculated for each mCitrine cDNA-containing spot (transfection efficiency, back bars) or for mCherry cDNA-containing spots (interspot contamination, light-gray bars). Dark-grey bars represent the % of mCitrine-expressing cells in empty areas. Results obtained with the protocol that includes the washing step are shown. An example of cropped areas used for 20x objective simulation is shown (left panels). The number of mCitrine cells and the standard deviation are indicated.
Figure 3Cell dynamics in spots. MCF7 (a) or HeLa (b) cells seeded according to the standard protocol without washing step and incubated for 39 hours. After the first 24 hours of incubation cells were tracked in time lapse live cell imaging for 15 hours under growing conditions. The merged image (mCitrine in green and mCherry in red) of representative frames acquired every 2:30 hours are shown. (c) A431D cells were incubated for 5 hours after cell seeding and monitored for 7 hours. The merged image of the transmission, mCitrine (green) and mCherry (red) channels, taken every 75 min are shown.