Difference between revisions of "Team:UParis BME/Results"

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<p class="textContent">Extraction of small vesicles was performed on the two cell lines using a protocol based on differential centrifugation in order to obtain pure exosomes free from all types of residues and contamination.  
 
<p class="textContent">Extraction of small vesicles was performed on the two cell lines using a protocol based on differential centrifugation in order to obtain pure exosomes free from all types of residues and contamination.  
Due to the transparency of the vesicles, a BiCinchoninic acid Assay (BCA) test has been performed to evaluate the amount of total proteins in our samples. Low concentration in protein means that we have no biological component inside.</p>
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Due to the transparency of the vesicles, a BiCinchoninic acid Assay (BCA) test has been performed to evaluate the amount of total proteins in our samples. Vesicle membrane contains proteins, thus we can correlate the concentration of proteins with the concentration of small vesicles.</p>
  
 
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<p class="textContent">BCA results show protein concentration between 350 and 660 µg/mL, as described in Table 1. These concentrations are decent, leading to the assumption that we had exosomes. BCA  seems to be a good indicator for the presence of proteins in our samples, Hopefully, referring to exosomes.</p>
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<p class="textContent">BCA results show protein concentration between 350 and 660 µg/mL, as described in Table 1. These concentrations are decent, leading to the assumption that we had vesicles. </p>
 
   
 
   
 
<p class="textContent">A western blot has been conducted to confirm the presence of exosomes in the vesicle extract, using CD9+ and CD63+ as surface markers and Calnexin as a negative control (non-exosomal protein). As shown on Figure 12, we observed a band for the CD63+ markers for the extracts from HeLa cells but not from MCF-7 cells. The negative control was Calnexin, an abundant 90kDA chaperone protein that resides in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum and it’s certainly not found in the exosomes. Calnexin was detected in samples from MCF-7 cells (A and B), meaning that it may not be pure exosomes. CD63+ was detected but not Calnexin for the sample from HeLa cells, we concluded that the vesicle extract from HeLa cells contained exosomes.</p>
 
<p class="textContent">A western blot has been conducted to confirm the presence of exosomes in the vesicle extract, using CD9+ and CD63+ as surface markers and Calnexin as a negative control (non-exosomal protein). As shown on Figure 12, we observed a band for the CD63+ markers for the extracts from HeLa cells but not from MCF-7 cells. The negative control was Calnexin, an abundant 90kDA chaperone protein that resides in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum and it’s certainly not found in the exosomes. Calnexin was detected in samples from MCF-7 cells (A and B), meaning that it may not be pure exosomes. CD63+ was detected but not Calnexin for the sample from HeLa cells, we concluded that the vesicle extract from HeLa cells contained exosomes.</p>

Revision as of 16:11, 21 October 2021