| Literature DB >> 23737872 |
Xiaodan Liu1, Qiuling Fan, Gang Yang, Nan Liu, Dong Chen, Yi Jiang, Lining Wang.
Abstract
A modified procedure for Dynabead perfusion was developed to provide a practical methodology for obtaining large quantities of glomeruli from mice with a high purity. The glomeruli may be useful in exploring the mechanism behind glomerular diseases in conjunction with proteomics. The aim of the study was to save on costs and help researchers, particularly beginners, in the practical application of this method in their studies. Kidneys of C57BL/6 mice were perfused via two different techniques with Dynabeads. The purity and structures of the isolated glomeruli were investigated. The amounts of glomerular protein were measured and the costs of kidney and heart perfusions were compared. There was a 100% success rate at all stages involved in separating the glomeruli of mice via kidney perfusion. The isolated glomeruli remained intact and the purity was 96.7±1.2%. The average amounts of protein in the isolated glomeruli of 8- and 20-week-old mice were 45.6±13.4 and 55.8±17.0 μg, respectively. The cost of glomerular isolation via kidney perfusion was one-fortieth of the cost of isolation via heart perfusion. The described procedure is practical and has a high success rate. The isolated glomeruli of mice were intact and pure and a large quantity was obtained at a lower cost.Entities:
Keywords: Dynabeads; glomerulus; kidney perfusion; proteomics
Year: 2013 PMID: 23737872 PMCID: PMC3671739 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2013.1000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1Diagrams of kidney perfusion techniques. Method 1, via the abdominal aorta. Method 2, via the thoracic aorta.
Figure 2Isolated glomeruli perfused with Dynabeads. Isolated glomeruli occupied the entire visual field. The scale bar represents 100 mm.
Figure 3An assessment of Dynabead perfusion with hematoxylin and eosin staining. Dynabeads are located in the majority of the glomeruli. The scale bars represent (A) 100 μm and (B) 50 μm.
Figure 4Examination of the quality of isolated glomeruli that contain Dynabeads with electron microscopy. Scanning electron micrographs of (A) an isolated glomerulus that remained intact following the isolation procedure and (B) multiple foot processes that are in a reasonably good shape. (C) Transmission electron micrograph of a transected glomerulus, including the fenestrated endothelial cells, intact foot processes and Dynabeads in capillary lumens. The scale bars represent (A) 10 μm, (B) 1 μm and (C) 2 μm.
Amount of Dynabeads used with either heart or kidney perfusion.
| Perfusion method | Operational concentration (beads/ml) | Volume/mouse | Number of Dynabead bottles used |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart | 8×107 | 40 ml | 1.6 |
| Kidney | 4×106 | 20 ml | 0.04 |
Method of Takemoto et al(15).
The original concentration of Dynabeads is 4×108 beads/ml and the volume of Dynabeads is 5 ml per bottle.