Organelle Transport in Cultured Drosophila Cells: S2 Cell Line and Primary Neurons. |
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Authors: | Wen Lu Urko del Castillo Vladimir I Gelfand |
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Institution: | 1.Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University;2.IKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science |
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Abstract: | Drosophila S2 cells plated on a coverslip in the presence of any actin-depolymerizing drug form long unbranched processes filled with uniformly polarized microtubules. Organelles move along these processes by microtubule motors. Easy maintenance, high sensitivity to RNAi-mediated protein knock-down and efficient procedure for creating stable cell lines make Drosophila S2 cells an ideal model system to study cargo transport by live imaging. The results obtained with S2 cells can be further applied to a more physiologically relevant system: axonal transport in primary neurons cultured from dissociated Drosophila embryos. Cultured neurons grow long neurites filled with bundled microtubules, very similar to S2 processes. Like in S2 cells, organelles in cultured neurons can be visualized by either organelle-specific fluorescent dyes or by using fluorescent organelle markers encoded by DNA injected into early embryos or expressed in transgenic flies. Therefore, organelle transport can be easily recorded in neurons cultured on glass coverslips using living imaging. Here we describe procedures for culturing and visualizing cargo transport in Drosophila S2 cells and primary neurons. We believe that these protocols make both systems accessible for labs studying cargo transport. |
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Keywords: | Cellular Biology Issue 81 Drosophila melanogaster cytoskeleton S2 cells primary neuron culture microtubules kinesin dynein fluorescence microscopy live imaging |
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