Counting cells is often a necessary but tedious step for in vitro cell culture. Consistent cell concentrations ensure experimental reproducibility and accuracy. Cell counts are important for monitoring cell health and proliferation rate, assessing immortalization or transformation, seeding cells for subsequent experiments, transfection or infection, and preparing for cell-based assays. It is important that cell counts be accurate, consistent, and fast, particularly for quantitative measurements of cellular responses.Despite this need for speed and accuracy in cell counting, 71% of 400 researchers surveyed 1 who count cells using a hemocytometer. While hemocytometry is inexpensive, it is laborious and subject to user bias and misuse, which results in inaccurate counts. Hemocytometers are made of special optical glass on which cell suspensions are loaded in specified volumes and counted under a microscope. Sources of errors in hemocytometry include: uneven cell distribution in the sample, too many or too few cells in the sample, subjective decisions as to whether a given cell falls within the defined counting area, contamination of the hemocytometer, user-to-user variation, and variation of hemocytometer filling rate 2 .To alleviate the tedium associated with manual counting, 29% of researchers count cells using automated cell counting devices; these include vision-based counters, systems that detect cells using the Coulter principle, or flow cytometry 1 . For most researchers, the main barrier to using an automated system is the price associated with these large benchtop instruments 1 .The Scepter cell counter is an automated handheld device that offers the automation and accuracy of Coulter counting at a relatively low cost. The system employs the Coulter principle of impedance-based particle detection 3 in a miniaturized format using a combination of analog and digital hardware for sensing, signal processing, data storage, and graphical display. The disposable tip is engineered with a microfabricated, cellsensing zone that enables discrimination by cell size and cell volume at sub-micron and sub-picoliter resolution. Enhanced with precision liquid-handling channels and electronics, the Scepter cell counter reports cell population statistics graphically displayed as a histogram. Video LinkThe video component of this article can be found at
To study the differential expression of the murine VLA-4 (alpha 4 beta 1) integrin, the 5'-flanking region of the gene for the alpha subunit (alpha 4m) was isolated and a cDNA for alpha 4m was obtained with reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The cDNA sequence contained a difference in the signal peptide region compared to the previously described cDNA (Neuhaus et al., 1991). As a consequence, another start codon is predicted, resulting in a decrease in size of the signal peptide. This was confirmed by genomic sequencing. The promoter region was delimited by ribonuclease protection assay (RPA) and transfection experiments fusing 5'-upstream fragments to the luciferase gene. A fragment extending from -936 to +221 was capable of controlling the expected cell-type-specific expression. Sequence comparison of the mouse alpha 4m promoter region with the human alpha 4h promoter revealed little homology. Like most integrin subunits, alpha 4m lacks TATA anc CCAAT boxes. Putative recognition sites for DNA-binding nuclear factors (AP1, AP2, Sp1, and PU1) were identified. The characterization of the promoter region and further identification of the transcription regulatory elements should provide insight in the regulation of alpha 4m integrin gene expression.
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