mounting suspension cells

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cromey cromey
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mounting suspension cells

Last week I had some users bring in suspension cells for me to image with our confocal.  Darn things were moving so much that it was difficult to get two colors to line up using sequential scanning.  Apparently these are non-adherent cells, so growing them on a coverslip is not an option.  Any suggestions?  What they gave me was a drop of cells in culture media, we put it between a slide and  coverslip.

 

Doug

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Douglas W. Cromey, M.S. - Assistant Scientific Investigator

Dept. of Cell Biology & Anatomy, University of Arizona

1501 N. Campbell Ave, Tucson, AZ  85724-5044 USA

 

office:  AHSC 4212         email: [hidden email]

voice:  520-626-2824       fax:  520-626-2097

 

http://swehsc.pharmacy.arizona.edu/exppath/

Home of: "Microscopy and Imaging Resources on the WWW"

 

Franco Del Principe Franco Del Principe
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Re: mounting suspension cells

Doug

Two things come to mind:

1) Did you use plasticine "feet" on the coverslip? When using square
coverslips you can streak each corner over a piece of plasticine leaving
a bit of it attached to the corner of the glass. This gives the
coverslip a support to prevent squeezing of the liquid and subsequent
moving of the trapped medium underneath. It is quite useful when
operating with immersion oil.

2) Some cell types' adherence capacity is temperature dependent. HEK293
for instance detach as soon they come out of the 37 degree incubator.

Cheers

Franco

[hidden email] wrote:

> Last week I had some users bring in suspension cells for me to image
> with our confocal.  Darn things were moving so much that it was
> difficult to get two colors to line up using sequential scanning.  
> Apparently these are non-adherent cells, so growing them on a coverslip
> is not an option.  Any suggestions?  What they gave me was a drop of
> cells in culture media, we put it between a slide and  coverslip.
>
>  
>
> Doug
>
>  
>
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>
> Douglas W. Cromey, M.S. - Assistant Scientific Investigator
>
> Dept. of Cell Biology & Anatomy, University of Arizona
>
> 1501 N. Campbell Ave, Tucson, AZ  85724-5044 USA
>
>  
>
> office:  AHSC 4212         email: [hidden email]
>
> voice:  520-626-2824       fax:  520-626-2097
>
>  
>
> http://swehsc.pharmacy.arizona.edu/exppath/
>
> Home of: "Microscopy and Imaging Resources on the WWW"
>
>  
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
> No virus found in this incoming message.
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>

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Nathan-64 Nathan-64
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Re: mounting suspension cells

In reply to this post by cromey
Hi Doug,

  we work with two lines of suspension cells and freshly isolated cells.  I've been successful with live (FURA-2 and GFP) and fixed cell imaging of cells attached to coverslips coated with poly-L-lysine or BD's Cell Tak.

  There are many protocols for poly-l-lysine coating.  I immerse sterilized coverslips for 1 hour at 37degC in a 0.5-1mg/ml poly-L-lysine solution followed by three washes with ddH2O and one wash with serum-free culture medium. I apply cells after that and let them adhere overnight.

  For Cell Tak, I spread four microliters of the delivered, neat solution onto a coverslip using a rubber spatula. I then let the coverslip dry under a bright lamp, wash the coverslip once with ddH2O, and then let it dry again (I'll usually aspirate off as much water as I can before the final drying). Then, I place half a milliliter droplet of cell suspension on the coverslip and let the cells attach for 20 minutes to an hour at 37degC.  It's also possible to lay down Cell Tak by adsorption too, but my applications haven't required it.

  For our cells (mast cell lines), the faster, but more expensive, Cell Tak option usually results in more attached cells.

Best of Luck,
Nate


--
Nathan O'Connor
Silver Laboratory
Department of Physiology and Biophysics
Weill Cornell Medical College
New York, NY 10021



On Mon, Oct 6, 2008 at 11:36 AM, <[hidden email]> wrote:

Last week I had some users bring in suspension cells for me to image with our confocal.  Darn things were moving so much that it was difficult to get two colors to line up using sequential scanning.  Apparently these are non-adherent cells, so growing them on a coverslip is not an option.  Any suggestions?  What they gave me was a drop of cells in culture media, we put it between a slide and  coverslip.

 

Doug

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Douglas W. Cromey, M.S. - Assistant Scientific Investigator

Dept. of Cell Biology & Anatomy, University of Arizona

1501 N. Campbell Ave, Tucson, AZ  85724-5044 USA

 

office:  AHSC 4212         email: [hidden email]

voice:  520-626-2824       fax:  520-626-2097

 

http://swehsc.pharmacy.arizona.edu/exppath/

Home of: "Microscopy and Imaging Resources on the WWW"

 




Aryeh Weiss Aryeh Weiss
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parfocality problem with LWD objectives solved.

The problem I asked about a couple of weeks ago (inability to image with LWD
objectives in a IX81)  is solved. As expected, it was something very simple.

Turns out that the LUDL  stage on that system is indeed high, as I noticed. What
  I did not see the first time is that the objectives that came with the system
each have a brass extension ring into which they thread, and which adds a few mm
to their height.  I assume that this was done to resolve some mechanical issue
with the stage, though I am not sure.  I think the rest is clear. Today I got a
closer look at the objectives, and had that aha! moment. Placement of the ring
on my LWD  objective solved the problem.

Thanks to  list members to wrote to me with various suggestions.

--aryeh
--
Aryeh Weiss
School of Engineering
Bar Ilan University
Ramat Gan 52900 Israel

Ph:  972-3-5317638
FAX: 972-3-7384050
Mario-2 Mario-2
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Re: mounting suspension cells

In reply to this post by cromey
Doug,

You did not mention exactly what you were trying
to image in/on the cells. Cells that have been
developed to grow in suspension have been
selected for this ability and they do not
generally have the ECM/integrin/cytoskeletal
network that provides surface adhesion. Then, of
course, someone may have simply given you some
freshly trypsinized cells resulting in the same
problem, namely the lack of surface adhesion
molecules. In any case, if the cells do not have
to be imaged live, cells can be gently pelleted
and washed a couple of times with iso-osmotic PBS
to eliminate extraneous proteins from growth
medium.

After a couple of rinses the cells can be
suspended then fixed with the usual reagents say
2% paraformaldehyde in PBS. After 30 minutes to
an hour the cells will usually be sufficiently
permeabilized to allow labeling with Ab
fluorophore conjugates, etc. Conventional
labeling on coverslips or slides is easily
adapted to perform in suspension using gentle
pelleting and resuspension for rinsing cells.

As for mounting in something that is ~
physiological, I like to use a solution of 50%
glycerol plus PBS. The glycerol viscosity helps
keep cells from moving around (more glycerol
helps, too), and because of the lower dielectric
constant, the electrostatic binding to coverslips
or slides treated with polylysine also helps with
adhesion (must have M.W.„ 300 kDa).

Even better would be to make some aminopropyl
silane treated slides and coverslips. Polylysine
can come off the glass and wrap cells together in
the extreme. The aminopropyl silane treatment
creates covalently bound positively charged
surfaces that won't come off (the amino group can
become oxidized but takes a very long time).
Although I have not tried this with live cells,
aminopropyl glass would be first thing I'd try.
However, there is a potential problem with using
anything that creates a very large electrostatic
field in that this could have a strong effect on
the PM causing channels to open/close, local
lipid rearrangement (lipid flip-flop), and
generally altered kinetics of membrane
transporters and receptors. Cell Tak as Nathan
suggested could prove advantageous for live
cells; however, some of the same problems could
apply in that anything you do to cells that are
without the capacity to adhere are likely to
experience significant perturbation in their cell
surfaces.

Further, I also have a concern about Cell Tak in
that its crosslinking capacity (->adhesive
ability) depends to a large extent on its
polyphenolic moieties that generate free
radicals. In theory, this can lead to activated
oxygen species then oxidative damage to the cell
plasma membrane. I am curious if anyone has ever
tested Cell Tak to evaluate damage that it might
cause to cells. This could show up as an
increased permeability to Ca++. There must be
lots of Cell Tak experts out there. Any thoughts?

Mario

>Last week I had some users bring in suspension
>cells for me to image with our confocal.  Darn
>things were moving so much that it was difficult
>to get two colors to line up using sequential
>scanning.  Apparently these are non-adherent
>cells, so growing them on a coverslip is not an
>option.  Any suggestions?  What they gave me was
>a drop of cells in culture media, we put it
>between a slide and  coverslip.
>
>Doug
>
>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>Douglas W. Cromey, M.S. - Assistant Scientific Investigator
>Dept. of Cell Biology & Anatomy, University of Arizona
>1501 N. Campbell Ave, Tucson, AZ  85724-5044 USA
>
>office:  AHSC 4212         email: [hidden email]
>voice:  520-626-2824       fax:  520-626-2097
>
>http://swehsc.pharmacy.arizona.edu/exppath/
>Home of: "Microscopy and Imaging Resources on the WWW"
>


--
________________________________________________________________________________
Mario M. Moronne, Ph.D.

[hidden email]
[hidden email]
[hidden email]
Jeremy Adler Jeremy Adler
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Hunt for UV polarizing filter

In reply to this post by cromey
We are looking for linear polarizing filters that work in the UV range to place in the excitation path of a widefield microscope.
 
The standard filters used in fluorescence microscopy are limited to the visible range and the only  polarizing filters operating around 360nm that we have come across seem very expensive, >700 dollars.
 
A promising material, HNP'B, was available from the Polaroid Corp is apparently no longer available.
 
any suggestions would be appreciated.
 
Jeremy Adler
Cell Biology
The Wenner-Gren Inst.
Arrhenius Laboratories F5
Stockholm University
Stockholm 106 91
Sweden


Claire Brown Claire Brown
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Re: mounting suspension cells

In reply to this post by cromey
I have not tried them but Nunc has a product called the Livecell Array that
has little wells that the cells sit in. If I remember they are expensive but
perhaps they can be used multiple times.

http://www.nuncbrand.com/en/page.aspx?ID=11388

No commercial interest.

Sincerely,

Claire Brown
Ingela Parmryd Ingela Parmryd
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SV: mounting suspension cells

In reply to this post by Mario-2
Hi,

We use 3-aminopropyltriethoxy-silane coated coverslips to study live T cells, both primary T cells and Jurkat T cells. There does not appear to be any adverse effects on the cells. Polylysine coated coverslips on the other do cause T cell spreading and activation.

Regards,

Ingela

-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----
Från: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]] För Mario
Skickat: den 6 oktober 2008 20:34
Till: [hidden email]
Ämne: Re: mounting suspension cells

Doug,

You did not mention exactly what you were trying
to image in/on the cells. Cells that have been
developed to grow in suspension have been
selected for this ability and they do not
generally have the ECM/integrin/cytoskeletal
network that provides surface adhesion. Then, of
course, someone may have simply given you some
freshly trypsinized cells resulting in the same
problem, namely the lack of surface adhesion
molecules. In any case, if the cells do not have
to be imaged live, cells can be gently pelleted
and washed a couple of times with iso-osmotic PBS
to eliminate extraneous proteins from growth
medium.

After a couple of rinses the cells can be
suspended then fixed with the usual reagents say
2% paraformaldehyde in PBS. After 30 minutes to
an hour the cells will usually be sufficiently
permeabilized to allow labeling with Ab
fluorophore conjugates, etc. Conventional
labeling on coverslips or slides is easily
adapted to perform in suspension using gentle
pelleting and resuspension for rinsing cells.

As for mounting in something that is ~
physiological, I like to use a solution of 50%
glycerol plus PBS. The glycerol viscosity helps
keep cells from moving around (more glycerol
helps, too), and because of the lower dielectric
constant, the electrostatic binding to coverslips
or slides treated with polylysine also helps with
adhesion (must have M.W." 300 kDa).

Even better would be to make some aminopropyl
silane treated slides and coverslips. Polylysine
can come off the glass and wrap cells together in
the extreme. The aminopropyl silane treatment
creates covalently bound positively charged
surfaces that won't come off (the amino group can
become oxidized but takes a very long time).
Although I have not tried this with live cells,
aminopropyl glass would be first thing I'd try.
However, there is a potential problem with using
anything that creates a very large electrostatic
field in that this could have a strong effect on
the PM causing channels to open/close, local
lipid rearrangement (lipid flip-flop), and
generally altered kinetics of membrane
transporters and receptors. Cell Tak as Nathan
suggested could prove advantageous for live
cells; however, some of the same problems could
apply in that anything you do to cells that are
without the capacity to adhere are likely to
experience significant perturbation in their cell
surfaces.

Further, I also have a concern about Cell Tak in
that its crosslinking capacity (->adhesive
ability) depends to a large extent on its
polyphenolic moieties that generate free
radicals. In theory, this can lead to activated
oxygen species then oxidative damage to the cell
plasma membrane. I am curious if anyone has ever
tested Cell Tak to evaluate damage that it might
cause to cells. This could show up as an
increased permeability to Ca++. There must be
lots of Cell Tak experts out there. Any thoughts?

Mario

>Last week I had some users bring in suspension
>cells for me to image with our confocal.  Darn
>things were moving so much that it was difficult
>to get two colors to line up using sequential
>scanning.  Apparently these are non-adherent
>cells, so growing them on a coverslip is not an
>option.  Any suggestions?  What they gave me was
>a drop of cells in culture media, we put it
>between a slide and  coverslip.
>
>Doug
>
>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>Douglas W. Cromey, M.S. - Assistant Scientific Investigator
>Dept. of Cell Biology & Anatomy, University of Arizona
>1501 N. Campbell Ave, Tucson, AZ  85724-5044 USA
>
>office:  AHSC 4212         email: [hidden email]
>voice:  520-626-2824       fax:  520-626-2097
>
>http://swehsc.pharmacy.arizona.edu/exppath/
>Home of: "Microscopy and Imaging Resources on the WWW"
>


--
________________________________________________________________________________
Mario M. Moronne, Ph.D.

[hidden email]
[hidden email]
[hidden email]