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Thursday, June 30, 2011

Cloning Fact Sheet: questions and answers (1)

Introduction

The possibility of human cloning, raised when Scottish scientists at Roslin Institute created the much-celebrated sheep "Dolly" (Nature 385, 810-13, 1997), aroused worldwide interest and concern because of its scientific and ethical implications. The feat, cited by Science magazine as the breakthrough of 1997, also generated uncertainty over the meaning of "cloning" --an umbrella term traditionally used by scientists to describe different processes for duplicating biological material.

What is cloning? Are there different types of cloning?

When the media report on cloning in the news, they are usually talking about only one type called reproductive cloning. There are different types of cloning however, and cloning technologies can be used for other purposes besides producing the genetic twin of another organism. A basic understanding of the different types of cloning is key to taking an informed stance on current public policy issues and making the best possible personal decisions. The following three types of cloning technologies will be discussed: (1) recombinant DNA technology or DNA cloning, (2) reproductive cloning, and (3) therapeutic cloning.


Recombinant DNA Technology or DNA Cloning

The terms "recombinant DNA technology," "DNA cloning," "molecular cloning," and "gene cloning" all refer to the same process: the transfer of a DNA fragment of interest from one organism to a self-replicating genetic element such as a bacterial plasmid. The DNA of interest can then be propagated in a foreign host cell. This technology has been around since the 1970s, and it has become a common practice in molecular biology labs today.

Scientists studying a particular gene often use bacterial plasmids to generate multiple copies of the same gene. Plasmids are self-replicating extra-chromosomal circular DNA molecules, distinct from the normal bacterial genome (see image to the right). Plasmids and other types of cloning vectors were used by Human Genome Project researchers to copy genes and other pieces of chromosomes to generate enough identical material for further study.

To "clone a gene," a DNA fragment containing the gene of interest is isolated from chromosomal DNA using restriction enzymes and then united with a plasmid that has been cut with the same restriction enzymes. When the fragment of chromosomal DNA is joined with its cloning vector in the lab, it is called a "recombinant DNA molecule." Following introduction into suitable host cells, the recombinant DNA can then be reproduced along with the host cell DNA.

Plasmids can carry up to 20,000 bp of foreign DNA. Besides bacterial plasmids, some other cloning vectors include viruses, bacteria artificial chromosomes (BACs), and yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs). Cosmids are artificially constructed cloning vectors that carry up to 45 kb of foreign DNA and can be packaged in lambda phage particles for infection into E. coli cells. BACs utilize the naturally occurring F-factor plasmid found in E. coli to carry 100- to 300-kb DNA inserts. A YAC is a functional chromosome derived from yeast that can carry up to 1 MB of foreign DNA. Bacteria are most often used as the host cells for recombinant DNA molecules, but yeast and mammalian cells also are used.


Reproductive Cloning

Reproductive cloning is a technology used to generate an animal that has the same nuclear DNA as another currently or previously existing animal. Dolly was created by reproductive cloning technology. In a process called "somatic cell nuclear transfer" (SCNT), scientists transfer genetic material from the nucleus of a donor adult cell to an egg whose nucleus, and thus its genetic material, has been removed. The reconstructed egg containing the DNA from a donor cell must be treated with chemicals or electric current in order to stimulate cell division. Once the cloned embryo reaches a suitable stage, it is transferred to the uterus of a female host where it continues to develop until birth.

Dolly or any other animal created using nuclear transfer technology is not truly an identical clone of the donor animal. Only the clone's chromosomal or nuclear DNA is the same as the donor. Some of the clone's genetic materials come from the mitochondria in the cytoplasm of the enucleated egg. Mitochondria, which are organelles that serve as power sources to the cell, contain their own short segments of DNA. Acquired mutations in mitochondrial DNA are believed to play an important role in the aging process.

Dolly's success is truly remarkable because it proved that the genetic material from a specialized adult cell, such as an udder cell programmed to express only those genes needed by udder cells, could be reprogrammed to generate an entire new organism. Before this demonstration, scientists believed that once a cell became specialized as a liver, heart, udder, bone, or any other type of cell, the change was permanent and other unneeded genes in the cell would become inactive. Some scientists believe that errors or incompleteness in the reprogramming process cause the high rates of death, deformity, and disability observed among animal clones.


Therapeutic Cloning

Therapeutic cloning, also called "embryo cloning," is the production of human embryos for use in research. The goal of this process is not to create cloned human beings, but rather to harvest stem cells that can be used to study human development and to treat disease. Stem cells are important to biomedical researchers because they can be used to generate virtually any type of specialized cell in the human body. Stem cells are extracted from the egg after it has divided for 5 days. The egg at this stage of development is called a blastocyst. The extraction process destroys the embryo, which raises a variety of ethical concerns. Many researchers hope that one day stem cells can be used to serve as replacement cells to treat heart disease, Alzheimer's, cancer, and other diseases.

In November 2001, scientists from Advanced Cell Technologies (ACT), a biotechnology company in Massachusetts, announced that they had cloned the first human embryos for the purpose of advancing therapeutic research. To do this, they collected eggs from women's ovaries and then removed the genetic material from these eggs with a needle less than 2/10,000th of an inch wide. A skin cell was inserted inside the enucleated egg to serve as a new nucleus. The egg began to divide after it was stimulated with a chemical called ionomycin. The results were limited in success. Although this process was carried out with eight eggs, only three began dividing, and only one was able to divide into six cells before stopping.


How can cloning technologies be used?

Recombinant DNA technology is important for learning about other related technologies, such as gene therapy, genetic engineering of organisms, and sequencing genomes. Gene therapy can be used to treat certain genetic conditions by introducing virus vectors that carry corrected copies of faulty genes into the cells of a host organism. Genes from different organisms that improve taste and nutritional value or provide resistance to particular types of disease can be used to genetically engineer food crops. With genome sequencing, fragments of chromosomal DNA must be inserted into different cloning vectors to generate fragments of an appropriate size for sequencing.

If the low success rates can be improved (Dolly was only one success out of 276 tries), reproductive cloning can be used to develop efficient ways to reliably reproduce animals with special qualities. For example, drug-producing animals or animals that have been genetically altered to serve as models for studying human disease could be mass produced.

Reproductive cloning also could be used to repopulate endangered animals or animals that are difficult to breed. In 2001, the first clone of an endangered wild animal was born, a wild ox called a gaur. The young gaur died from an infection about 48 hours after its birth. In 2001, scientists in Italy reported the successful cloning of a healthy baby mouflon, an endangered wild sheep. The cloned mouflon is living at a wildlife center in Sardinia. Other endangered species that are potential candidates for cloning include the African bongo antelope, the Sumatran tiger, and the giant panda. Cloning extinct animals presents a much greater challenge to scientists because the egg and the surrogate needed to create the cloned embryo would be of a species different from the clone.

Therapeutic cloning technology may some day be used in humans to produce whole organs from single cells or to produce healthy cells that can replace damaged cells in degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's or Parkinson's. Much work still needs to be done before therapeutic cloning can become a realistic option for the treatment of disorders.

Oxidase test

Background: The oxidase test is a test used in microbiology to determine if a bacterium produces certain cytochrome c oxidases. It uses disks impregnated with a reagent such as N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD) or N,N-Dimethyl-p-phenylenediamine (DMPD), which is also a redox indicator.

Strains may either be oxidase positive (OX+) or negative (OX-).

OX+

OX+ normally means that the b

acterium contains cytochrome c oxidase and can therefore utilize oxygen for energy production with an electron transfer chain. Typically the Pseudomonadaceae are OX+[citation needed] Another example is the preliminary identification of Neisseria and Moraxella genera, which are both oxidase positive, Gram-negative diplococci.

Many Gram-negative spiral curved rods are also oxidase positive, which includes Helicobacter pylori, Vibrio cholera, and Campylobacter jejuni.

Also Legionella pneumophila is oxidase positive. A trick to remember the most medical relevant bacteria is: "VIce President CHeNEy MOstly LEads" (Vibrio, Pseudomonas, Campylobacter, Helicobacter, Neisseria, Moraxella, and Legionella, respectively).

OX-

OX- normally

means that the bacterium does not contain cytochrome c oxidase and therefore cannot utilize oxygen for energy production with an electron transfer chain. Typically Enterobacteriaceae are OX-.

Procedures

Wet each disk with about 4 inoculating loops of de-ionized water.

Use a loop to aseptically transfer a large mass of pure bacteria to the disk.

Observe the disk for up to 3 minutes. If the area of inoculation turns dark blue to maroon to almost black, then the result is positive. If a color change does not occur within three minutes, the result is negative.

Alternatively, live bacteria cultivated on trypticase soy agar plates may be prepared using sterile technique with a single-line streak inoculation. The inoculated plates are incubated at 37°C for 24–48 hours to establish colonies. Fresh bacterial preparations should be used. After colonies have grown on the media, two-to-three drops of the reagent DMPD is added to the surface of each organism to be tested.

A positive test (OX+) will result in a color change to pink, through maroon and into black, within 10–30 seconds.

A negative test (OX-) will result in a light pink coloration or absence of coloration.

Lipid Monolayer Assay Protocol

by Brian J. Peter and Matthew K. Higgins

Background

Lipid monolayers have been used for many years as templates for the formation of two-dimensional crystals of soluble proteins (reviewed in (1)) and, more recently, membrane proteins (2). The principle of the assay is that phospholipids on an aqueous droplet adopt a conformation in which the hydrophobic tails point towards the air while the hydrophilic head groups contact the solution. Proteins of interest interact with the head groups and are concentrated in a two-dimensional array. A hydrophobic electron microscope grid interacts with the lipid tails, allowing the monolayer to be removed from the droplet and studied in the electron microscope. The lipid monolayer simulates the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane, and can be used to reconstitute early stages of endocytosis. The formation of ordered clathrin assemblies can be observed using negative stain electron microscopy, and platinum shadowing can reveal the invagination of these coats. For examples, see references (3,4). A schematic of the technique and a gallery of images obtained with this technique can be viewed using the links, or at http://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/groups/hmm/epsin/EM/

Reagents

HKM buffer (25mM Hepes pH 7.4, 125mM potassium acetate, 5mM magnesium acetate, 1mM dithiothreitol).

Chloroform

methanol

Phosphatidylinositol and Phospatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (Avanti polar lipids) and were dissolved to 1mg/ml in 3:1 chloroform: methanol. Cholesterol (also Avanti) was dissolved to 10mg/ml in Chloroform. Phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine (all from Sigma) were dissolved in chloroform to 10mg/ml. Lipid stocks were stored at -80C.

2% uranyl acetate (Biorad) with 0.0025% polyacrylic acid (Sigma) in water (see note 2)

Purified clathrin. Clathrin should be dialyzed into HKM buffer and centrifuged for 20 minutes at 100000 gmax (e.g., 45000 r.p.m. in a Beckman TLA100 rotor) immediately prior to use to remove aggregates.

Purified AP180, epsin, or other clathrin- and lipid-binding protein.

Equipment

Teflon block with 60 microliter wells allowing for side injection (see figure 1)

Carbon and collodion-coated gold electron microscopy grids (e.g., G204G from Agar Scientific, coated first with collodion or formvar, and then with a thin layer of evaporated carbon)

Humid chamber, or covered container with a wet paper towel inside

Forceps for handling EM grids—self-locking spring forceps are especially useful

Whatman filter paper or similar, for blotting EM grids.

Parafilm

Vacuum evaporator, 0.2mm diameter piece of platinum wire (TAAB Laboratories),1mm thick tungsten wire (also TAAB) (necessary for platinum shadowing)

Transmission electron microscope.

Procedure

1. Make up a lipid mixture containing 10% cholesterol, 40% PE, 40% PC and 10% PtdIns(4,5)P2 to a final concentration of 0.1mg/ml in a 19:1 mixture of chloroform: methanol (methanol is necessary to maintain PtdIns(4,5)P2 solubility). This mixture should be made on the day the monolayer is made. If stored, it should be stored under argon at –80 degrees in a glass vial with a glass or Teflon lid, for not longer than three days.

2. Arrange teflon block in humid chamber, and fill wells of teflon block with HKM buffer. Fill the wells with 40-60 microliters of buffer, such that the total volume in the well will be 60 microliters after injection of protein samples. See note 2.

3. Carefully pipet (or inject with Hamilton syringe) 1 microliter of lipid mixture on to the buffer in the well. As a negative control, inject pure chloroform without any lipid (this will test for lipid dependence of any structures seen, such as whether clathrin baskets form in solution instead of clathrin coats on the monolayer surface). See note 3.

4. Incubate at room temperature for 60 minutes. The chloroform should evaporate, leaving a monolayer of lipid on the surface of the buffer.

5. Carefully place one EM grid, carbon side down, onto the top of each buffer droplet. Grids should not be glow discharged before use as a hydrophobic carbon film is required to adhere to the hydrophobic lipid tails of the monolayer.

6. Gently inject proteins into the side injection well. Final protein concentrations in the well should be 0.5-2 micromolar for the AP180/epsin/adaptor protein, and 30-500 nanomolar for the clathrin. It is often useful to try several concentrations, to account for differences in protein activity.

7. Incubate 60 minutes at room temperature.

8. Prepare Uranyl acetate stain. Lay a fresh piece of Parafilm on the bench, and place two 30 microliter drops side by side on the Parafilm for each grid which will be stained. Lay out a piece of Whatman filter paper to blot buffer and stain from grids. Lay out a second piece of filter paper on which to set grids to air dry.

9. Gently inject approximately 30 microliters of buffer into the side injection port; this will raise the grid up above the surface of the teflon block. Immediately grab the grid with forceps and lift it vertically off of the droplet.

10. Blot the grid briefly by touching it to the filter paper, then touch it to the first stain droplet and blot immediately. Touch the grid to the second stain droplet, leave for 30 seconds, and blot briefly. This leaves a film of stain on the surface of the grid in which the protein is embedded. If the grids will be platinum shadowed, hold the grid to the filter paper for several seconds to ensure that the entire grid surface dries. Lay the grid on another piece of filter paper to dry.

11. For negative stain EM, grids can be examined in the EM immediately. They are also stable for several weeks, at least, at room temperature.

12. If platinum shadowing is required, set up the vacuum evaporator with a 2cm long piece of platinum wire coiled tightly round a piece of 1mm thick tungsten wire. Place the grids to be shadowed on a rotary platform at an angle of 10 to the line between the platform centre and the platinum coil. Create a vacuum in the evaporator. With a shield between the grids and the wire, turn on the current to the tungsten wire. When the platinum wire melts, remove the shield and the platinum will evaporate onto the grids. For rotary platinum shadowing, start rotation of the platform was immediately before removing the shield. For single angle shadowing, the platform can remain stationary during the evaporation. 1-2 minutes of evaporation is usually sufficient, but trials may need to be done to account for differences in evaporators.

Notes

This procedure will take approximately 3 hours. All reagents should be of the highest purity available, and buffers should be filtered before use.

1. The addition of polyacrylic acid helps to prevent the stain from precipitating and forming uranyl acetate crystals. But this is not essential, alternatively UrAc solutions can be clarified by filtration or centrifugation before use.

2. It is important to ensure that the surface of the droplet is either flat or slightly concave. Overfilling the teflon wells leads to a convex droplet surface, upon which the monolayer does not form properly. Also, filling the wells with too little volume (less than 35 microliters, or depending on the geometry of the block) can lead to an uneven surface near the side injection port.

3. Trace lipid contamination (e.g., PtdIns(4,5)P2) on the teflon block can result in misleading negative controls. Teflon block should be rinsed with hot water, then ethanol, and finally, soaked overnight in a mixture of chloroform/methanol to remove any protein or lipid residue. Hamilton syringes are also susceptible to trace lipid contamination.

References

1. Chiu W, Avila-Sakar AJ, Schmid MF. Electron crystallography of macromolecular periodic arrays on phospholipid monolayers. Adv Biophys. 1997;34:161-72.

2. Levy D, Mosser G, Lambert O, Moeck GS, Bald D, Rigaud JL. Two-dimensional crystallization on lipid layer: A successful approach for membrane proteins.
J Struct Biol. 1999 Aug;127(1):44-52

3. Ford MG, Mills IG, Peter BJ, Vallis Y, Praefcke GJ, Evans PR, McMahon HT. Curvature of clathrin-coated pits driven by epsin. Nature. 2002;419(6905):361-6.

4. Ford MG, Pearse BM, Higgins MK, Vallis Y, Owen DJ, Gibson A, Hopkins CR, Evans PR, McMahon HT. Simultaneous binding of PtdIns(4,5)P2 and clathrin by AP180 in the nucleation of clathrin lattices on membranes. Science. 2001;291(5506):1051-5.

Source:

http://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/groups/hmm/techniqs/mono.html

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Hills Road, Cambridge, U.K. CB2 2QH

If there are questions or comments, contact bpeter@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk or Harvey: hmm@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk

Lipid-Protein Overlay Assay (Fat Blotting)

Principle of the assay: This assay will test specific interactions between proteins and

immobilized lipids. It is essentially most similar to immunoblotting, with the added step of protein

binding preceding the antibody steps.

Special reagents and equipment:

Fatty Acid-Free (FAF) BSA Sigma Cat# A6003

Hybond C extra membrane Amersham Biosciences Cat # RPN2020E

Procedure:

1. Dilute lipids of interest in chloroform to equal concentration such that your desired amount

of lipid can be achieved in a total volume of 5 ul. *

2. Spot 5 ul of each dilution of lipid on to Hybond C extra membrane (mixed ester supported

nitrocellulose). **

3. Allow the membrane to dry at room temperature for at least 1 hr post-spotting. ***

4. Wet the membrane by floating on nano-purified water for 10 minutes, followed by

equilibration in buffer for 5 minutes (TBS-T (0.1% Tween-20)).

5. Block membrane in 3% FAF-BSA/TBS-T for 1 hr at room temperature. ****

6. Dilute your protein to 0.2 μg/ml in 3% FAF-BSA/TBS-T. Incubate membrane with protein

solution overnight at 4

o

C.*****.

7. Next morning: wash the membrane 6 times (5 minutes for each wash) with TBS-T.

8. Incubate with primary antibody in 3% FAF-BSA/TBS-T for 1 hr. at room temperature (do

not use nonfat dry milk, use the FAF-BSA throughout the entire procedure).******

9. Wash as in 7.

10. Incubate with secondary antibody in 3% FAF-BSA/TBS-T for 1 hr at room temperature.

11. Wash 12 times (5 minutes each wash) with TBS-T.

12. Visualize protein binding using enhanced chemiluminescence. Expose to film for 5

minutes for an initial trial and modify time as needed. .*******

Reference:

1. Stevenson, J.M., I.Y. Perera, and W.F. Boss, A phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase pleckstrin

homology domain that binds phosphatidylinositol 4-monophosphate. J Biol Chem, 1998.

273(35): p. 22761-7.

2. Dowler, S., et al., Identification of pleckstrin-homology-domain-containing proteins with novel

phosphoinositide-binding specificities. Biochem J, 2000. 351(Pt 1): p. 19-31.

3. Jones, J.A. and Y.A. Hannun, Tight Binding Inhibition of Protein Phosphatase-1 by

Phosphatidic Acid. SPECIFICITY OF INHIBITION BY THE PHOSPHOLIPID. J Biol Chem,

2002. 277(18): p. 15530-8. Jones JA, Hannun YA.Tight binding inhibition of protein phosphatase-1 by phosphatidic acid.

Specificity of inhibition by the phospholipid. J Biol Chem. 2002 May 3;277(18):15530-8. Epub

2002 Feb 20.

Author: Jeffrey Jones (modified by Bill Wu)

Your email: wub@musc.edu

Date: Dec-2009

Hop DNA Extraction Protocol


1. Obtain an adequate amount (~ 1g) of fresh hop leaves and crush them with liquid Nitrogen and a small amount of Carborundum powder (fine 320 grit).

2. Assume 90% of mass is water weight.

3. Add 3.3 ml of buffer per gram of wet (16 ml per gram of dried) hop leaves, and incubate for 1 to 4 hours at 60-65°C.

4. Transfer 900 μl into fresh tube

5. add 600 μl of 24:1 CHCl3:octanol and invert gently (do NOT vortex!).

6. Centrifuge at 5000g for 10 minutes.

7. Transfer supernatant (800 μl) into new 2-ml tube.

8. Add 5μl of RNAase and incubate at 37°C for 30 minutes (or more).

9. Add 0.6 volumes Isopropanol and mix gently by inverting the tubes. Check for DNA precipitation.

10. Spin down for 10 min. at RT.

11. Add 500 μl wash buffer and incubate 10 min. at RT.

12. Carefully remove wash buffer. Don't lose DNA pellet!

13. Briefly centrifuge to collect pellet at bottom of tube - remove any remaining wash buffer.

14. Dry pellet at RT or 50°C to speed up.

15. Add 100 μl ddH2O to dissolve DNA.

16. Store at -20°C until needed.

17. Run electrophoresis for analysis.

Prepared solutions

Buffer: 100 ml: 50 mM Tris/HCl (ph 8.0), 1.8 M NaCl, 50 mM EDTA. Then add 10 mg/ml of CTAB ( 200 mg per 20 ml buffer, final conc. = 1%) and 1 μl/ml 2-mercaptoethanol (20 μl to 20 ml buffer; final conc. = 0.1%).

Wash buffer 100 ml: 200 μl 5M NH4OAc (final conc. = 10 mM), 76.0 ml abs. ethanol (final conc. = 76%), and 23.8 ml of sterilized water.


Bioprotocols: Hop DNA Extraction Protocol

25 Dec 2010 ... Hop DNA Extraction Protocol. 1. Obtain an adequate amount (~ 1g) of fresh hop leaves and crush them with liquid Nitrogen and a small amount ...
bio888.blogspot.com/2010/12/hop-dna-extraction-protocol.html

Robust CTAB-activated charcoal protocol for plant DNA extraction
authorM KRIŽMAN - 2006
Dried hop cones were obtained from the experimental fields (yield 2005) .... Modification of a CTAB DNA extraction protocol for plants ...
fp.unud.ac.id/biotek/wp-content/uploads/biologisel/ekstraksi-dna.pdf


Isolation of plant DNA: A fast, inexpensive, and reliable method

authorP Guillemaut - 1992
Protocol. Isolation of plant DNA. DNA can be isolated from fresh, frozen, dried or lyophilized material without pretreatment of tissue. The procedure ...
www.springerlink.com/index/2656658377412530.pdf

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Von Kossa Stain for Calcium Detection

The method was originally developed by von Kossa, and underwent several modifications. The stain principle is a precipitation reaction in which silver ions react with phosphate (not calcium) in the presence of acidic material. Photochemical degradation of silver phosphate to silver then occurs under light illumination.

Additional methods need to be employed to confirm the presence of calcium and hydroxyapatite, such as Alizarin Red, which detects calcium deposits.

VON KOSSA Stain Procedure:

1. Sections to water.

2. Place sections in 1% silver nitrate solution under reasonable light for 30-60 minutes.

3. Wash in distilled water.

4. Treat with 3% sodium thiosulphate for 3-5 minutes.

5. Wash in water.

6. Counterstain with van Gieson for 3-5 minutes.

7. Wash in alcohol.

8. Clear .

9. Mount sections

RESULTS:

Mineralised bone black Osteoid red

Other Protols for Von Kossa

von Kossa Staining Protocol for Calcium

von Kossa Staining Protocol for Calcium. NovaUltra Special Stain Kits. Description: This technique is for demonstrating deposits of calcium or calcium salt ...
www.ihcworld.com/_protocols/special_stains/von_kossa.htm

Von Kossa Stain - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Von Kossa Stain. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: navigation, search. Thevon Kossa stain is used to quantify mineralization in cell culture ...
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Von Kossa's Method - Calcium
VON KOSSA'S METHOD - CALCIUM. PURPOSE: Abnormal deposits of calcium may be found in any area of the body. With the H&E stain, calcium appear deep ...
library.med.utah.edu/WebPath/.../VONKOSSA.PDF

Renal Fellow Network: the von Kossa Stain for Acute Phosphate ...

17 Aug 2009 ... A good detection method is the use of the von Kossa stain, which stains certain calcium-containing salts such as calcium phosphate a ...
renalfellow.blogspot.com/.../von-kossa-stain-for-acute-phosphate.html

Technical Bulletin #444 von Kossa Staining of Osteoclast ...
von Kossa Staining of Osteoclast Resorption on BD BioCoat™ Osteologic™ Discs ... Figure 1: von Kossa stain of BD BioCoat™ Osteologic™ Disc following ten-day ...
www.bdbiosciences.com/external_files/dl/doc/tech.../TB444.pdf

von Kossa staining alone is not sufficient to confirm that ...
Numerous techniques are currently used to characterize biological mineralization in intact tissues and cell cultures; the von Kossa staining method, ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12724828

The von Kossa reaction for calcium deposits: silver lactate ...
We have demonstrated that positive von Kossa stain- ing correlates well with calcifications in... cultures the von Kossa stain usually yielded identifiable ...
www.springerlink.com/index/k782p815tn252t39.pdf

Re: [Histonet] von kossa stain

27 Jan 2004 ... My understanding of the von Kossa stain is that it is NOT specific for calcium. Rather, the silver nitrate in the staining solution (silver ...
www.histosearch.com/histonet/.../Re.Histonetvonkossastain.html

VON KOSSA STAIN KIT PROCEDURE
VON KOSSA STAIN KIT PROCEDURE. Item# KT 028. KIT. 100ml. Nuclear Fast Red Stain. 100ml. 5% Silver Nitrate. COMPONENTS. 100ml. 5% Sodium Thiosulfate ...
search.cosmobio.co.jp/cosmo_search_p/..._/KT028.20060119.pdf

von Kossa stain - Definition

von Kossa stain definition from the mondofacto online medical dictionary.
www.mondofacto.com/facts/dictionary?von+Kossa+stain

Von Kossa Staining Alone Is Not Sufficient to Confirm that ...
and cell cultures; the von Kossa staining method, elec- tron microscopic analysis (EM), ....However, the von Kossa stain is being used with greater ...
www.springerlink.com/index/TWUFXJY1VTHUVYR5.pdf

von Kossa and Alcian Blue Staining Protocol for Calcium and ...

Combination of von Kossa and Alcian Blue staining will make both calcium and mucosubstances visible on the same tissue sections. ...
www.ihcworld.com/_...stains/von_kossa.alcian_blue.htm

Histology Lab: VON KOSSA

Histotechnology Technical methods. Stain for calcium ... VON KOSSA. 1. Sections to water. 2. Place sections in 1% silver nitrate solution under ultra- ...
www.nottingham.ac.uk/pathology/protocols/vonkoss.html

Von kossa stain: Definition with Von kossa stain Pictures and Photos

Definition of Von kossa stain with photos and pictures, translations, sample usage, and additional links for more information.
www.lexic.us/definition-of/von_kossa_stain

Stain Expert™ - Your Stains & Reagents Information Center

Calcium Stain - Von Kossa. Celestine Blue Method - Lendrum. Copper Stain (Rubeanic Acid). Cresyl Violet Acetate Method for Helicobacter sp. ...
www.sigmaaldrich.com

JoVE: Undecalcified Bone Preparation for Histology ...
8 Jan 2010 ... An identical protocol or rack staining is necessary for ... Von Kossa. Place in silver nitrate solution and expose to strong light until ...
www.jove.com/index/details.stp?id=1707

Isolation of human multipotent mesenchymal stem cells from second ...
We developed a novel two
stage culture protocol for isolating MSCs from amniotic .... (d) Osteogenic differentiation was demonstrated by von Kossa staining. ...
humrep.oxfordjournals.org/content/19/6/1450.full

BioMed Central | Full text | Isolation of mesenchymal stem cells ...
30 May 2007 ... Von Kossa staining of calcium-phosphate deposits was performed. ... (1999) [40] and a slightly modified protocol of the one reported by ...
www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6750/7/26

Fwd: [Histonet] Question on Von Kossa

Of course, as with any silver stain use acid cleaned glassware and gloves ... Does anyone have a good Von Kossa stain protocol that they would not mind ...
www.mail-archive.com/histonet@lists...edu/msg00672.html

Von Kossa Stain for Calcium Detection

The method was originally developed by von Kossa, and underwent several modifications. The stain principle is a precipitation reaction in which silver ions react with phosphate (not calcium) in the presence of acidic material. Photochemical degradation of silver phosphate to silver then occurs under light illumination.

Additional methods need to be employed to confirm the presence of calcium and hydroxyapatite, such as Alizarin Red, which detects calcium deposits.

VON KOSSA Stain Procedure:

1. Sections to water.

2. Place sections in 1% silver nitrate solution under reasonable light for 30-60 minutes.

3. Wash in distilled water.

4. Treat with 3% sodium thiosulphate for 3-5 minutes.

5. Wash in water.

6. Counterstain with van Gieson for 3-5 minutes.

7. Wash in alcohol.

8. Clear .

9. Mount sections

RESULTS:

Mineralised bone black Osteoid red

Other Protols for Von Kossa

von Kossa Staining Protocol for Calcium

von Kossa Staining Protocol for Calcium. NovaUltra Special Stain Kits. Description: This technique is for demonstrating deposits of calcium or calcium salt ...
www.ihcworld.com/_protocols/special_stains/von_kossa.htm

Von Kossa Stain - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Von Kossa Stain. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: navigation, search. Thevon Kossa stain is used to quantify mineralization in cell culture ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Von_Kossa_Stain

Von Kossa's Method - Calcium
VON KOSSA'S METHOD - CALCIUM. PURPOSE: Abnormal deposits of calcium may be found in any area of the body. With the H&E stain, calcium appear deep ...
library.med.utah.edu/WebPath/.../VONKOSSA.PDF

Renal Fellow Network: the von Kossa Stain for Acute Phosphate ...

17 Aug 2009 ... A good detection method is the use of the von Kossa stain, which stains certain calcium-containing salts such as calcium phosphate a ...
renalfellow.blogspot.com/.../von-kossa-stain-for-acute-phosphate.html

Technical Bulletin #444 von Kossa Staining of Osteoclast ...
von Kossa Staining of Osteoclast Resorption on BD BioCoat™ Osteologic™ Discs ... Figure 1: von Kossa stain of BD BioCoat™ Osteologic™ Disc following ten-day ...
www.bdbiosciences.com/external_files/dl/doc/tech.../TB444.pdf

von Kossa staining alone is not sufficient to confirm that ...
Numerous techniques are currently used to characterize biological mineralization in intact tissues and cell cultures; the von Kossa staining method, ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12724828

The von Kossa reaction for calcium deposits: silver lactate ...
We have demonstrated that positive von Kossa stain- ing correlates well with calcifications in... cultures the von Kossa stain usually yielded identifiable ...
www.springerlink.com/index/k782p815tn252t39.pdf

Re: [Histonet] von kossa stain

27 Jan 2004 ... My understanding of the von Kossa stain is that it is NOT specific for calcium. Rather, the silver nitrate in the staining solution (silver ...
www.histosearch.com/histonet/.../Re.Histonetvonkossastain.html

VON KOSSA STAIN KIT PROCEDURE
VON KOSSA STAIN KIT PROCEDURE. Item# KT 028. KIT. 100ml. Nuclear Fast Red Stain. 100ml. 5% Silver Nitrate. COMPONENTS. 100ml. 5% Sodium Thiosulfate ...
search.cosmobio.co.jp/cosmo_search_p/..._/KT028.20060119.pdf

von Kossa stain - Definition

von Kossa stain definition from the mondofacto online medical dictionary.
www.mondofacto.com/facts/dictionary?von+Kossa+stain

Von Kossa Staining Alone Is Not Sufficient to Confirm that ...
and cell cultures; the von Kossa staining method, elec- tron microscopic analysis (EM), ....However, the von Kossa stain is being used with greater ...
www.springerlink.com/index/TWUFXJY1VTHUVYR5.pdf

von Kossa and Alcian Blue Staining Protocol for Calcium and ...

Combination of von Kossa and Alcian Blue staining will make both calcium and mucosubstances visible on the same tissue sections. ...
www.ihcworld.com/_...stains/von_kossa.alcian_blue.htm

Histology Lab: VON KOSSA

Histotechnology Technical methods. Stain for calcium ... VON KOSSA. 1. Sections to water. 2. Place sections in 1% silver nitrate solution under ultra- ...
www.nottingham.ac.uk/pathology/protocols/vonkoss.html

Von kossa stain: Definition with Von kossa stain Pictures and Photos

Definition of Von kossa stain with photos and pictures, translations, sample usage, and additional links for more information.
www.lexic.us/definition-of/von_kossa_stain

Stain Expert™ - Your Stains & Reagents Information Center

Calcium Stain - Von Kossa. Celestine Blue Method - Lendrum. Copper Stain (Rubeanic Acid). Cresyl Violet Acetate Method for Helicobacter sp. ...
www.sigmaaldrich.com

JoVE: Undecalcified Bone Preparation for Histology ...
8 Jan 2010 ... An identical protocol or rack staining is necessary for ... Von Kossa. Place in silver nitrate solution and expose to strong light until ...
www.jove.com/index/details.stp?id=1707

Isolation of human multipotent mesenchymal stem cells from second ...
We developed a novel two
stage culture protocol for isolating MSCs from amniotic .... (d) Osteogenic differentiation was demonstrated by von Kossa staining. ...
humrep.oxfordjournals.org/content/19/6/1450.full

BioMed Central | Full text | Isolation of mesenchymal stem cells ...
30 May 2007 ... Von Kossa staining of calcium-phosphate deposits was performed. ... (1999) [40] and a slightly modified protocol of the one reported by ...
www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6750/7/26

Fwd: [Histonet] Question on Von Kossa

Of course, as with any silver stain use acid cleaned glassware and gloves ... Does anyone have a good Von Kossa stain protocol that they would not mind ...
www.mail-archive.com/histonet@lists...edu/msg00672.html