Fluorescent Protein Reporter Systems for Single-Cell Measurements
| Abstract |
|
|
The unraveling of the complex dynamic networks that underlie cellular (and, by extension, tissue, organ, and organism) function
requires sophisticated mathematical models and, in order to test those models, rich data sets. In addition, even in clonal
populations of cells, there is a wide range of variability in cellular function at any given time, even in simple parameters
such as the concentration of critical signaling components such as receptors or transcription factors. It remains a matter
of conjecture as to whether this is noise, to which the system is inherently robust, or whether the cellular control network
can exist in multiple discrete internal states, with indistinguishable input/output characteristics. Fluorescent protein-based
methods have two features useful for addressing these issues. First, they can be used to retrieve data from individual cells.
Second, in combination with confocal fluorescence microscopy, they can be used nondestructively and can thus follow one or
more individual cells in culture or in an intact organism over time.
Affiliation(s): (2) Section of Functional Genomics, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Sheffield, UK
(3) Cardiovascular Research Unit, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Sheffield, UK
(3) Cardiovascular Research Unit, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Sheffield, UK
Book Title: Reporter Genes: A Practical Guide
Series: Methods in Molecular Biology | Volume: 411 | Pub. Date: Sep-13-2007 | Page Range: 111-119 | DOI: 10.1007/978-1-59745-549-7_8
Subject: Genetics/Genomics
Key Words: Fluorescent proteins - confocal microscopy - reporters - signal transduction - transcription - cytokines
Comments (Loading...) |
||
Loading... |





















