1 / 21

Practical molecular biology

Practical molecular biology. PD Dr. Alexei Gratchev Prof. Dr. Julia Kzhyshkowska Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Kaminski. Course structure. 08.10 Plasmids, restriction enzymes, analytics 09.10 Genomic DNA, RNA 10.10 PCR, real-time (quantitative) PCR 11.10 Protein analysis IHC

kinipela
Download Presentation

Practical molecular biology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Practical molecular biology PD Dr. Alexei Gratchev Prof. Dr. Julia Kzhyshkowska Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Kaminski

  2. Course structure • 08.10 Plasmids, restriction enzymes, analytics • 09.10 Genomic DNA, RNA • 10.10 PCR, real-time (quantitative) PCR • 11.10 Protein analysis IHC • 12.10 Flow cytometry (FACS)

  3. Nomenclature • FACS – Fluorescence Assisted Cell Sorting • FACS analysis • Flow cytometry • Flow cytofluorometry

  4. Applications • Medicine • Immunophenotyping of blood cells • Diagnostic of various hematologic diseases • Transplantation • Research • Cell cycle analysis • Expression analysis • Phagocytosis, endocytosis • Cytokine production analysis

  5. History • 1950-1960 Cytophotometry. UMSP-1 (Zeiss) 5-10 min/cell • 1969 Pulse cytophotometry. ICP-11 (Phywe, Göttingen) (in 1976 purchased by Ortho-diagnostics (USA) and later disappeared from the market) • Mercury lamp excitation (480-500nm) • 2 fluorescent parameters PMT detectors (no scatter detectors) • >1000 cells/sec • 1970 Cytofluorograph (Ortho-Diagnostics) • Argon laser (488 nm) as a light source • 1976 Dual laser instrument (DKFZ, Heidelberg) • 1986 First sorter (PARTEC, Münster) • 1990-1993 Cell sizing option (Bruker-Odam, France)

  6. Principle of flow cytometry Hydrodynamic focusing of the cells in the focused laser beam

  7. Optical scheme of a flow cytometer

  8. 4 colour flow cytometer

  9. Optical system of BD FACSAria II

  10. 2 laser flow cell

  11. Fluorophores

  12. Fluorophores • Parameters collected • FSC – Forward scatter (correlates with the cell size) • SSC –Sideward scatter (correlates with the cell granulation) • FL – Fluorescence signal (min 3, max 12 channels) • Concentration of cells (only with some flow cytometers) • Size of the cell (only with some flow cytometers)

  13. Flow cytometry results

  14. Compensation problem

  15. 4 colour compensation

  16. Compensation • Measure cells labelled with single antibody • Determine the percentage of the signal in wrong detector • Generate compensation matrix • Modern cytometers perform compensation automatically

  17. Experiment planning • Antibody has to be highly specific • Antibody has to be tittered • Select correct fluorophores (low expression – bright fluorescence, high expression – weak fluorescence) • Think about the abundance of the cell population you want to analyse

  18. Controls • Non stained cells • Cells stained with single antibodies/dyes (for compensation purpose) • Cells stained with unspecific isotype control – unspecific antibodies of the same isotype as your test antibodies, labeled with the same fluorophore with the same efficiency

  19. Cell staining • Prepare cell suspension • Add antibody • Incubate • Wash • Measure

  20. Experiment today • 2 µl CD14 FITC Ab • 2 µl CD16 APC Ab • 2 µl CD14 FITC Ab + CD16 APC Ab • 2 µl Isotype FITC • 2 µl Isotype APC • 2 µl Isotype FITC + 2 µl Isotype APC • Non-labelled cells

  21. Questions?

More Related