Antibodies were efficiently delivered into viable trrypanosoma organism using 0.4µg antibody and 0.4µL of Ab-DeliverIN transfection reagent.
This article demonstrates the high efficiency of Ab-DeliverIN transfection reagent from OZ Biosciences to deliver antibodies into whole organism.article reference: Advances in bioscience and biotechnology, 2013, 4, 719-726.
Antibody delivery into viable epimastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi as a tool to study the parasite biologyKarla Y. Acosta-Viana, Huchin-Cetz Julio, Jimenez-Coello Matilde, Guzman-Marin Eugenia, Jose L. Rosales-Encina
ABSTRACT
American
trypanosomiasis is a zoonosis of worldwide medical importance and
currently there is no effective treatment in chronic patients, hence the
importance of the study of protein function of the parasite with the
objective of finding new drug targets and to know better the biology of
the agent causal (Trypano-soma cruzi). T. cruzi
is an RNAi-negative parasite, therefore the silencing genes strategies
by RNAi is not possible; for that reason, antibodies may be taken as a
tool for studying the parasite proteins function by blocking these
molecules with specific antibodies. The aim of this work was to
establish a methodology for antibody delivery (antibody transfection)
into viable parasites. We used anti-cyclin-A antibody (human origin) in
western blot assay with epimastigote of T. cruzi proteins and this recognized a ~55
kDa polypeptide. Several methods for antibody transfection
(electroporation, saponin permeabilization and a lipid-based
formulation) were tested. The first two methods were unsuccessful. In
electroporation was impossible to visualize the antibody inside
parasites and with saponin permeabilization, antibodies were
successfully introduced, but with loss of parasites viability. The
lipid-based formulation method forms noncovalent complexes with
antibodies. These complexes are internalized by cells and antibodies are
released into the cytoplasm. With this method, a successful antibody
delivery was achieved. Anti-cyclin antibodies were visualized in the
cytoplasm from fixed transfected parasites (immunofluorescence assays).
At 24 h post-transfection, parasites maintained their viability (90%)
and were able to arrest the cell cycle in G0/G1-phase of cultured
epimastigotes (cell population increased
in G0/G1-phase from 50.5% to 66.2% and decreased in S-phase from 47.2%
to 26%). It was also observed that anti-cyclin-A antibodies inhibit the
parasite population doubling (p < 0.05, 95% CI). This is the first
report of antibody-delivery into viable epimastigote forms of T. cruzi, with a simple and cheap technique, which will allows carrying out further studies of this protozoan.
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