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Generation of neighbor-labeling cells to study intercellular interactions in vivo.

Luigi OmbratoEmma NolanDiana PassaroIvana KurelacVictoria L BridgemanAlexander WaclawiczekDelfim DuarteCristina Lo CelsoDominique BonnetIlaria Malanchi
Published in: Nature protocols (2020)
Understanding cell-cell interactions is critical in most, if not all, research fields in biology. Nevertheless, studying intercellular crosstalk in vivo remains a relevant challenge, due mainly to the difficulty in spatially locating the surroundings of particular cells in the tissue. Cherry-niche is a powerful new method that enables cells expressing a fluorescent protein to label their surrounding cells, facilitating their specific isolation from the whole tissue as live cells. We previously applied Cherry-niche in cancer research to study the tumor microenvironment (TME) in metastasis. Here we describe how to generate cancer cells with the ability to label their neighboring cells (within the tumor niche) by transferring a liposoluble fluorescent protein. Live niche cells can be isolated and compared with cells distant from the tumor bulk, using a variety of ex vivo approaches. As previously shown, this system has the potential to identify novel components in the TME and improve our understanding of their local interactions. Importantly, Cherry-niche can also be applied to study potential cell-cell interactions due to in vivo proximity in research fields beyond cancer. This protocol takes 2-3 weeks to generate the labeling cells and 1-2 weeks to test their labeling ability.
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