Title of article
Diolistics: incorporating fluorescent dyes into biological samples using a gene gun
Author/Authors
John A. O’Brien، نويسنده , , Sarah C.R. Lummis، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
5
From page
530
To page
534
Abstract
The hand-held gene gun provides a rapid and efficient method of incorporating fluorescent dyes into cells, a technique that is becoming known as diolistics. Transporting fluorescent dyes into cells has, in the past, used predominantly injection or chemical methods. The use of the gene gun, combined with the new generation of fluorescent dyes, circumvents some of the problems of using these methods and also enables the study of cells that have proved difficult traditionally to transfect (e.g. those deep in tissues and/or terminally differentiated); in addition, the use of ion- or metabolite-sensitive dyes provides a route to study cellular mechanisms. Diolistics is also ideal for loading cells with optical nanosensors – nanometre-sized sensors linked to fluorescent probes. Here, we discuss the theoretical considerations of using diolistics, the advantages compared with other methods of inserting dyes into cells and the current uses of the technique, with particular consideration of nanosensors.
Journal title
Trends in Biotechnology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Trends in Biotechnology
Record number
1233419
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