Saturday, August 13, 2022
No Result
View All Result
Medical Finance
  • Home
  • News
  • Interviews
  • Mediknowledge
  • Insights From Industry
  • Thought Leaders
  • Coronavirus
  • Whitepapers
  • Home
  • News
  • Interviews
  • Mediknowledge
  • Insights From Industry
  • Thought Leaders
  • Coronavirus
  • Whitepapers
No Result
View All Result
Medical Finance
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Researchers develop new method for visualizing single cell protein secretion with stunning resolution

by Medical Finance
in News
First patient-derived stem cell model developed for studying oculocutaneous albinism
9
SHARES
100
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

We have recently witnessed the stunning images of distant galaxies revealed by the James Webb telescope, which were previously visible only as blurry spots. Washington University in St. Louis researchers have developed a novel method for visualizing the proteins secreted by cells with stunning resolution, making it the James Webb version for visualizing single cell protein secretion.

The researchers, led by Srikanth Singamaneni, the Lilyan & E. Lisle Hughes Professor of Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science at the McKelvey School of Engineering, and Anushree Seth, a former postdoctoral scholar in Singamaneni’s lab, developed the FluoroDOT assay, which they introduced in a paper Aug. 5 in the journal Cell Reports Methods. The highly sensitive assay is able to see and measure proteins secreted by a single cell in about 30 minutes.

In collaboration with researchers at Washington University School of Medicine and other universities, they found that the FluoroDOT assay is versatile, low cost and adaptable to any laboratory setting and has the potential to provide a more comprehensive look at these proteins than the widely used existing assays. Biomedical researchers look to these secreted proteins for information on cell-to-cell communication, cell signaling, activation and inflammation, among other actions, but existing methods are limited in sensitivity and can take up to 24 hours to process.

What makes the FluoroDOT assay different from existing assays is that it uses a plasmonic-fluor, a plasmon-enhanced nanolabel developed in Singamaneni’s lab that is 16,000 times brighter than conventional fluorescence labels and has a signal-to-noise ratio nearly 30 times higher.

Plasmonic-fluors are composed of metal nanoparticles that serve as antenna to pull in the light and enhance the fluorescence emission of molecular fluorophores, thus making it an ultrabright nanoparticle.”


Srikanth Singamaneni, the Lilyan & E. Lisle Hughes Professor of Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science, McKelvey School of Engineering

This ultrabright emission of plasmonic-fluor allows the user to see extremely small quantities of secreted protein, which they are unable to do in existing assays, and measure the high-resolution signals digitally using the number of particles, or dot pattern, per cluster, or spot, using a custom-built algorithm. In addition, it doesn’t require special equipment. Singamaneni and his collaborators first published their work with the plasmonic-fluor in Nature Biomedical Engineering in 2020.

The patent-pending plasmonic fluor technology is licensed by the Office of Technology Management at Washington University in St. Louis to Auragent Bioscience LLC.

“Using a simple fluorescence microscope, we are able to simultaneously image a cell along with the spatial distribution of the proteins secreted around it,” said Seth, who had worked in Singamaneni’s lab and is now a principal scientist in cellular applications for Auragent Bioscience. “We saw interesting secretion patterns for different cell types. This assay also enables concurrent visualization of two types of proteins from individual cells. When the multiple cells are subjected to the same stimuli, we can distinguish the cells that are secreting two proteins at the same time from the ones that are only secreting one protein or are not secreting at all.”

To validate the technology, the team used proteins secreted from both human and mouse cells, including immune cells infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

One of the collaborators and co-authors, Jennifer A. Philips, MD, PhD, the Theodore and Bertha Bryan Professor in the departments of Medicine and Molecular Microbiology and co-director of the Division of Infectious Diseases at the School of Medicine, has used the FluoroDOT assay in her lab.

“When Mycobacterium tuberculosis infects immune cells, those cells respond by secreting important immune proteins, called cytokines,” Philips said. “But not all cells respond to infection the same way. The FluoroDOT assay allowed us to see how individual cells in a population respond to infection -; to see which cells are secreting and in which direction. This was not possible with the older technology.”

Source:

Washington University in St. Louis

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
Share 0
Medical Finance

Medical Finance

Related Posts

A newly discovered species of worm kills tarantulas

A newly discovered species of worm kills tarantulas

by Medical Finance
August 13, 2022
0

Scientists have named a newly discovered species of worm that kills tarantulas after American actor, musician and producer Jeff Daniels,...

Investigational cancer drug mimics the metabolic and therapeutic effects of fasting, mice study shows

Investigational cancer drug mimics the metabolic and therapeutic effects of fasting, mice study shows

by Medical Finance
August 13, 2022
0

An investigational cancer drug that starves tumors of their energy supply also shows evidence of improving whole body metabolism, according...

Ocean living microbes make oxygen in the dark

New findings could contribute to future therapeutics for muscle degeneration

by Medical Finance
August 13, 2022
0

An international team led by uOttawa Faculty of Medicine researchers have published findings that could contribute to future therapeutics for...

Scientists unravel how blood cells mount the first line of defense against viruses

‘Decoy’ protein mitigates lung damage, death induced by aggressive SARS-CoV-2 variants

by Medical Finance
August 13, 2022
0

A drug treatment that acts as a decoy against SARS-CoV-2 was highly effective at preventing death and lung damage in...

Study identifies a new potential pathway for developing therapeutics against Epstein-Barr virus

Study identifies a new potential pathway for developing therapeutics against Epstein-Barr virus

by Medical Finance
August 13, 2022
0

A new study by researchers at The Wistar Institute, an international biomedical research leader in cancer, immunology, infectious disease, and...

New mathematical model can calculate the risk of resistance evolution for drug pairs

New mathematical model can calculate the risk of resistance evolution for drug pairs

by Medical Finance
August 13, 2022
0

Bacteria have dangerously evolved to thwart many of the medicines that were designed to kill them. As a result, a...

Next Post
Researchers create a DNA-based fluorescent nanoantenna to monitor the motions of proteins

New dual-plasmid editing system for DNA-based information rewriting in vivo

Scientists unravel how blood cells mount the first line of defense against viruses

NIH researchers develop three-dimensional structure of twinkle protein

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Support

  • Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms And Conditions

Categories

  • Coronavirus
  • Insights From Industry
  • Interviews
  • Mediknowledge
  • News
  • Thought Leaders
  • Whitepapers

More News

  • Study: Exploring the Utility of NK Cells in COVID-19. Image Credit: Numstocker/Shutterstock
    Review aims to deepen the understanding of the role of natural killer cells in COVID-19
  • 78486183 620x480
    Pathogenic fungi in increasingly dry soils could represent a future threat to public health
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms And Conditions

© 2022 Medical Finance - Latest Financial and Business News

No Result
View All Result
  • Interviews
  • Mediknowledge
  • News
  • Insights From Industry
  • Coronavirus
  • Thought Leaders
  • Whitepapers
wpDiscuz
0
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
| Reply