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Noninvasive Intravascular Microtransfusion in Colonial Tunicates.

Lluìs Albert Matas SerratoAlessandro BilellaSimon Blanchoud
Published in: Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) (2022)
Tunicates are a diverse group of worldwide marine filter-feeders that are vertebrates' closest invertebrate relatives. Colonial tunicates are the only know chordates that have been shown to undergo whole-body regeneration (WBR). Botrylloides in particular can regenerate one fully functional adult from a minute fragment of their vascular system in as little as 10 days. This regenerative process relies on the proliferation of circulating stem cells, likely supported by the activity of some of the 11 identified types of hemocytes. To study and challenge WBR, it is thus important to have the capacity to isolate, analyze, and manipulate hemolymph in regenerating colonies. Here we present a microtransfusion technique that permits the collection of pure hemocytes, the quantification of their purity, their labeling, and reinjection into colonial tunicates. To exemplify our approach, we present in addition a protocol to analyze the isolated hemocytes using flow cytometry. Our approach is minimally invasive, does not induce lethality, and therefore allows repeated transfusion into exactly the same colony with minimal disruption to the process being studied.
Keyphrases
  • stem cells
  • flow cytometry
  • minimally invasive
  • cell therapy
  • randomized controlled trial
  • signaling pathway
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • cardiac surgery
  • coronary artery
  • sickle cell disease
  • young adults
  • acute kidney injury