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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 Loeb,  
 

Role of integrin beta1-like protein in proliferation and differentiation of cultured stem cells from midgut of Heliothis virescens.

Cultured midgut cells from Heliothis virescens larvae were incubated with anti-human integrin beta1 made in rabbit and then passed over a column of magnetic beads bound to anti-rabbit IgG (MACS, Miltenyi Bergisch Gladbach, Germany). Cells bound to integrin beta1 antibody also bound to the anti-rabbit IgG on the magnetic beads (MACS) and were retained in the column while it remained in the magnetic field. Non-bound cells were eluted at this time. They did not stain with anti-integrin antibody just after elution. Removing the column from the magnetic field allowed cells bound to the beads-integrin beta1 antibody to be eluted. All of these cells stained with human anti-integrin beta1 upon elution. Each cell fraction was cultured in medium for 3 days. During this time, the populations of cells tended to return to heterogeneous staining patterns characteristic of control populations. However, cells that did not stain immediately with anti-integrin beta1 antibody exhibited double the rate of multiplication and 8 times more differentiation than the integrin-antibody positive cells that eluted later, as well as the non-treated control cells. In a second experiment, midgut cells were incubated for 4 days with various titers of human anti-integrin beta1 to block surface integrin beta1-like reactive sites. Stem cells blocked with anti-integrin beta1 antibody during incubation exhibited double the rate of differentiation than non-treated control cells and those showing anti-integrin beta1-positive stain upon elution.[1]

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