Encyclopedia of Experiments
Kanser Araştırmaları
Bu içeriği görüntülemek için JoVE aboneliği gereklidir.  Oturum açın veya ücretsiz deneme sürümünü başlatın.
Encyclopedia of Experiments Kanser Araştırmaları
Fluorescence Microscopy of Neutrophil Extracellular Traps or NETs: A Technique to Observe Adhesive Interaction Between Cancer Cells and NETs

Fluorescence Microscopy of Neutrophil Extracellular Traps or NETs: A Technique to Observe Adhesive Interaction Between Cancer Cells and NETs

DEŞİFRE METNİ

Under pathological conditions like cancer, activated neutrophils release neutrophil extracellular traps or NETs – a mesh of extracellular DNA with associated enzymes and antimicrobial proteins – that entrap circulating cancer cells.

To visualize the adhesive interaction between NETs and tumor cells in vitro, begin by culturing low-density neutrophils, a neutrophil subtype, in a polymer-coated culture dish that promotes cell attachment. Incubate for a few hours to stimulate the neutrophils to form web-like NETs.

Add a suspension of red fluorescein-labeled cancer cells to the neutrophil culture. Incubate the cancer cells with NETs for a brief period to facilitate cancer cell-NET interaction. The NET-DNA acts as a chemotactic factor that attracts cancer cells and promotes their adhesion to NETs.

Remove the spent medium. Gently wash the culture with a suitable fresh medium to remove any unattached tumor cells from the culture well.

Now, add a membrane-impermeable green fluorescent nuclear stain to color the extracellular NETs selectively. Observe the culture under a fluorescence microscope. Neutrophil extracellular traps appear as green string-like structures that form a mesh to which red tumor cells are attached.

İlgili Videolar

Read Article