In In Situ Hybridization, Third Edition, Ian Darby Updates His Highly Successful Second Edition And Shifts The Focus To Tissue And Cell In Situ Hybridization. Drawing On Experts Working In Diverse Areas And Taking Advantage Of Advances In Non-isotopic In Situ Hybridization And Amplification Techniqu
In Situ Hybridization Protocols Volume 326 || PNA-In Situ Hybridization Method for Detection of HIV-1 DNA in Virus-Infected Cells and Subsequent Detection of Cellular and Viral Proteins
✍ Scribed by Ian, Darby A.; Tim, Hewitson D.
- Book ID
- 121365638
- Publisher
- Humana Press
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 223 KB
- Category
- Article
- ISBN-13
- 9781597450072
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
In In Situ Hybridization, Third Edition, Ian Darby Updates His Highly Successful Second Edition And Shifts The Focus To Tissue And Cell In Situ Hybridization. Drawing On Experts Working In Diverse Areas And Taking Advantage Of Advances In Non-isotopic In Situ Hybridization And Amplification Techniques, The Authors Describe In Detail Their Readily Reproducible Techniques For Preparation, Detection, And Tissue Hybridization. Among The New Techniques Detailed Are Pna Probes For Viral Diagnostics, Plant In Situ Hybridization, Cell Proliferation Detection, And Quantitation Of In Situ Hybridization. There Are Also Cutting-edge Techniques For Tissue Microarrays, Expanded Embryology-developmental Gene Detection, And Expanded Cell Culture. Derivative Techniques Presented Include The Identification Of Transplanted Cells, Histones, Nick-end Labeling For Apoptosis, The Use Of Peptide Nucleic Acid Probes, And In Situ Hybridization Of Plant Specimens. The Protocols Follow The Successful Methods In Molecular Biology™ Series Format, Each Offering Step-by-step Laboratory Instructions, An Introduction Outlining The Principles Behind The Technique, Lists Of The Necessary Equipment And Reagents, And Tips On Troubleshooting And Avoiding Known Pitfalls. Completely Updated And Highly Practical, In Situ Hybridization, Third Edition Allows Both The Molecular Biologist With Little Experience Of Histology And The Histologist With Little Experience Of Molecular Biology To Use These Powerful New Techniques Successfully. Treatment Of Tissue Sections For In Situ Hybridization -- Preparation Of Template Dna And Labeling Techniques -- In Situ Hybridization Using Crna Probes -- Tyramide Signal Amplification For Dna And Mrna In Situ Hybridization -- Expression Analysis Of Murine Genes Using In Situ Hybridization With Radioactive And Nonradioactively Labeled Rna Probes -- Nonradioactive In Situ Hybridization On Frozen Sections And Whole Mounts -- In Situ Hybridization Of Whole-mount Embryos -- In Situ Detection Of Epstein—barr Virus And Phenotype Determination Of Ebv-infected Cells -- Pna-in Situ Hybridization Method For Detection Of Hiv-1 Dna In Virus-infected Cells And Subsequent Detection Of Cellular And Viral Proteins -- Electron Microscopy And In Situ Hybridization -- In Situ Hybridization Using Riboprobes On Free-floating Brain Sections -- An In Situ Hybridization Technique To Detect Low-abundance Slug Mrna In Adherent Cultured Cells -- Identification Of Transplanted Human Cells In Animal Tissues -- In Situ Hybridization To Plant Tissues And Chromosomes -- Histochemical Localization Of Cell Proliferation Using In Situ Hybridization For Histone Mrna -- Histochemical Localization Of Apoptosis With In Situ Labeling Of Fragmented Dna -- The Use Of Combined Immunohistochemical Labeling And In Situ Hybridization To Colocalize Mrna And Protein In Tissue Sections -- Semiquantitative In Situ Hybridization Using Radioactive Probes To Study Gene Expression In Motoneuron Populations -- Quantitative In Situ Hybridization Of Tissue Microarrays. Edited By Ian A. Darby, Tim D. Hewitson. Description Based Upon Print Version Of Record. Includes Bibliographical References And Index. English
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Several in vitro studies have shown that HIV‐1 can infect CD4 negative epithelial cells of different origin including normal human oral keratinocytes, but whether this infection of mucosal epithelial cells occurs in vivo is still unclear. In this report, the presence and cell types infe
This volume, along with its companion (volume 474), presents methods and protocols dealing with thiol oxidation-reduction reactions and their implications as they relate to cell signaling. The critically acclaimed laboratory standard for 40 years, *Methods in Enzymology* is one of the most highly re