Electroporation-mediated uptake of proteins into mammalian cells
- 1 April 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Biochemistry and Cell Biology
- Vol. 68 (4) , 729-734
- https://doi.org/10.1139/o90-105
Abstract
Proteins of up to 230 kilodaltons are taken up by Chinese hamster ovary fibroblasts exposed to electroporation under conditions generally similar to those used to mediate DNA transfection. The uptake of catalase, ovalbumin, and histone H1 labelled with fluorescein was visualized by fluorescence microscopy. Under the same conditions, the uptake of colloidal gold particles (20 nm diameter) was visualized by electron microscopy. In optimum conditions, about 25% of the cells remained viable and grew normally and about 25% of these retained labelled proteins during two cycles of further growth. About 6 × 104 molecules of catalase were retained per cell. Proteins were taken up when presented to the cells up to 4 h after electroporation, suggesting that mechanisms other than classical electropore formation may operate in these conditions. The proteins were localized in the cytoplasm in a predominantly vesicular pattern and histone H1 entered the nucleus in some cells.Key words: electroporation, protein uptake, gold particle uptake, endocytosis, cell membrane.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
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