Re: Question

From: Nigel Blackhall (Nigel.Blackhall@nottingham.ac.uk)
Date: Thu Jul 11 2002 - 04:17:36 EST


Dear all

Nigel Blackhall
Senior Experimental Officer
Plant Science Division
School of Biosciences
University of Nottingham
Sutton Bonnington Campus
Lougborough
Leicestershire
tel  +44 (0) 115 9515151 ext 18501
fax +44 (0) 115 9516334



>>> Gisele Knowles <gknowles@sten.sunnybrook.utoronto.ca> 09/07/02
22:39:42 >>>

Hello colleagues-
Does anyone know of a product that can sit outside a cell and with
either
electroporation or other such stressor, enter the cell and then
fluoresce??
I have this in my brain that such a thing exists and I'm concurrently
trying
to avoid using fitc dextran altogether because I'm finding too much
non-specific fluorescence.  Anyway all comments would be appreciated.
Thanks


May I suggest you look at the following article
Flow cytometric quantification of electroporation-mediated uptake of
macromolecules into plant protoplasts.
Blackhall, N. W.; Finch, R. P.; Power, J. B.; Cocking, E. C.; Davey, M.
R.
Protoplasma 186 (1-2) 1995. 50-56.

In this paper we looked at the non-specific fluorescence, and showed
that it was caused by unbound FITC.  The problem is considerably
lessened by using purified FITC-dextran from Molecular Probes.

Regards

Nigel



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