A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content.  Sign in or start your free trial.
Effects of Photodynamic Treatment with Primaquine on the Phagocytic Efficiency of Murine Macrophages

Effects of Photodynamic Treatment with Primaquine on the Phagocytic Efficiency of Murine Macrophages

Transcript

Begin with a suspension of a murine macrophage cell line in complete RPMI 1640 medium as mentioned in the text protocol. Dispense 100 microliters of this cell suspension into the wells of a sterile 96-well flat-bottom culture plate. Incubate the plate overnight in an incubator.

The next day, remove the plate from the incubator. Replace the spent medium with 100 microliters of fresh RPMI-1640 medium. Then, dispense 100 microliters of cryptococcal cell suspension into the culture plate containing seeded macrophages.

To study the photodynamic effect, prepare the desired working concentrations of the photosensitizer. Add 100 microliters of working solution to the plate pre-seeded with macrophages and cryptococcal cells.

Incubate the plate in the dark for the cells to react with the drug. Post-incubation, expose the plates to UV light for two minutes.

After initiating photodynamic treatment, incubate the culture plates for 18 hours. Post-incubation, remove the supernatant, and wash the cells with 200 microliters of phosphate buffer solution.

Add 300 microliters of 0.1% Triton X-100 to the wells, and incubate at room temperature for 10 minutes.

Aspirate the contents of each well and dispense them into individual sterile 1.5-milliliter plastic tubes. Dilute the cells 10 times with distilled water, and pipette 50 microliters of the dilution onto individual yeast-malt-extract agar plates.

Use a spread plate method to create a confluent lawn of cells on the surface of the agar plate. Incubate the plates for 48 hours. Count the colony-forming units on the agar plates.

Related Videos

Read Article