Chunjing Qu
  • Clinical Lab Manager, Baylor Genetics Laboratories/Baylor College of Medicine
研究方向
  • Cancer biology
Synthetic Lethality Screens Using RNAi in Combination with CRISPR-based Knockout in Drosophila Cells
在果蝇细胞中利用RNAi联合基于CRISPR的基因敲除技术进行协同致死筛选
作者:Benjamin E. Housden, Hilary E. Nicholson and Norbert Perrimon日期:02/05/2017,浏览量:10672,Q&A: 0
A synthetic lethal interaction is a type of genetic interaction where the disruption of either of two genes individually has little effect but their combined disruption is lethal. Knowledge of synthetic lethal interactions can allow for elucidation of network structure and identification of candidate drug targets for human diseases such as cancer. In Drosophila, combinatorial gene disruption has been achieved previously by combining multiple RNAi reagents. Here we describe a protocol for high-throughput combinatorial gene disruption by combining CRISPR and RNAi. This approach previously resulted in the identification of highly reproducible and conserved synthetic lethal interactions (Housden et al., 2015).
Sulforhodamine B (SRB) Assay in Cell Culture to Investigate Cell Proliferation
利用磺酰罗丹明B(SRB)法检测细胞的增殖
作者:Esteban A. Orellana and Andrea L. Kasinski日期:11/05/2016,浏览量:46554,Q&A: 0
The SRB assay has been used since its development in 1990 (Skehan et al., 1990) to inexpensively conduct various screening assays to investigate cytotoxicity in cell based studies (Vichai and Kirtikara, 2006). This method relies on the property of SRB, which binds stoichiometrically to proteins under mild acidic conditions and then can be extracted using basic conditions; thus, the amount of bound dye can be used as a proxy for cell mass, which can then be extrapolated to measure cell proliferation.

The protocol can be divided into four main steps: preparation of treatment, incubation of cells with treatment of choice, cell fixation and SRB staining, and absorbance measurement. This assay is limited to manual or semiautomatic screening, and can be used in an efficient and sensitive manner to test chemotherapeutic drugs or small molecules in adherent cells. It also has applications in evaluating the effects of gene expression modulation (knockdown, gene expression upregulation), as well as to study the effects of miRNA replacement on cell proliferation (Kasinski et al., 2015).