| Literature DB >> 26469954 |
K Wendland1,2, M Thielke1, A Meisel1,2,3, P Mergenthaler1,2,3,4.
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26469954 PMCID: PMC4632289 DOI: 10.1038/cddis.2015.259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Dis Impact factor: 8.469
Figure 1Intrinsic hypoxia sensitivity of the CMV promoter. (a) Primary embryonic rat brain cortical neurons were transfected with a plasmid encoding for destabilized (d2)eGFP under the control of the CMV (a-i) or UBI (a-ii) promoter and imaged before and at several time points after OGD. The closed arrow in a-i marks a cell that shows weak green fluorescence before OGD and loses its fluorescence after cell death during the experiment, the open arrowhead marks a cell that is non-fluorescent before OGD but shows bright green fluorescence rapidly after OGD. The closed arrow in a-ii shows a cell with bright green fluorescence before OGD which dies in the course of 24 h after OGD and thereby decreases in fluorescence intensity. The open arrowhead in a-ii marks a cell that has weak green fluorescence throughout the experiment. Note that the apparent increase in fluorescence is due to the decrease of fluorescence intensity of the neighboring cell. DIC, differential interference contrast. Scale bar=15 μm. (b) D2eGFP levels were undetectable by western blotting until 24 h after OGD when expressed under the control of the CMV promoter (b-i), whereas d2eGFP was readily detectable at all time points when expressed under the control of the UBI promoter (b-ii). B, baseline (control conditions); H, hypoxia/OGD (c) Mitochondrially targeted tagRFPMito was almost undetectable until 24 h after OGD when expressed from the CMV promoter. Expression from FER, composite CAG, UBI or calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (C1.3) promoters did not result in significantly altered expression of the mitochondrial red-fluorescent protein. Note that only very high overexposure or adjustment of the contrast of this blot shows a faint band for CMV-tagRFPMito before OGD (not shown here), and that the band intensity for UBI-tagRFPMito after hypoxia (H) is slightly higher than before (possibly due to its subcellular localization or variable protein expression). B, baseline (before hypoxia); H, 24 h after hypoxia (OGD). In all experiments neuronal cultures, transfections and OGD experiments were essentially performed as described.[2] OGD or oxygen deprivation (OD) experiments were performed in a hypoxia workstation (Ruskinn Concept400 or InVivo2) with Bss0 (116 mM NaCl, 5.4 mM KCl, 0.8 mM MgSO4, 1 mM NaH2PO4, 26.2 mM NaHCO3, 10 μM glycine, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 10 mM Hepes; 37 °C, 0% or 0.3% O2, 5% CO2) for OGD and Bss10 (Bss0+10 mM glucose) for OD (37 °C, 0.3% O2, 5% CO2). For GD (37 °C, 21% O2, 5% CO2) Bss0 was used. Microscopy of d2EGFP constructs in 8 well μ-slides (Ibidi, Martinsried, Germany) was performed at the same position in each well using a mark and find software (Leica LAS AF, Wetzlar, Germany) for all time points. Thereby, it was possible to image changes in d2EGFP expression pattern in the exact same cell before and after OGD, OD or GD. Variations in image positions are due to μm-misplacement of the 8 well μ-slides in the microscopy stage. For figure preparation, 16 bit TIF images were converted to 8 bit TIF and contrast was adjusted uniformly after background subtraction with a rolling ball algorithm in ImageJ (Fiji v. 1.47d, http://www.fiji.sc). Plasmids were generated by subcloning d2eGFP (Clontech, Takara Bio Europe, St-Germain-en-Laye, France) or TagRFP-mito (Evrogen, Moscow, Russia) into vector backbones containing the CMV (pCDNA3.1, Invitrogen), UBI (Addgene plasmid 11651), CamKII1.3 (C1.3, Addgene plasmid 32577), or FER (pVitro2-neo-mcs, Invivogen) promoters