Guopeng Sun, Jinjiao He, Shaozu Li, Kaikai Jia, Tao Zhang, Haixun He, Peng Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Breakthrough progress has been made in the molecular mechanism research and clinical application of PD-1/PD-L1 in the regulation of immunosuppression and tolerance mainly in human and mouse fields, but is relatively slow in other species. The eukaryotic expression vectors pECFP-Fc-1 and pEYFP-Fc-L1 for high expression of canine PD-1 and PD-L1 proteins were constructed and transfected into human embryonic kidney 293 T cells. Fluorescence microscopy, laser scanning confocal microscopy, and immunofluorescence technology were used to identify the expression and membrane localization of the target proteins in human embryonic kidney 293 T cells. The binding activity of the target proteins expressed on the model cell was identified by eukaryotic expression vector co-transfection and immunocoprecipitation. The results showed that canine PD-1 and PD-L1 proteins were expressed on the membrane surfaces of their respective positively transfected cells. The cell membrane complex was further analyzed by co-immunoprecipitation technology, PD-L1 protein components were successfully detected in the pull-down complex of canine PD-1 antibody, and the two target proteins expressed in the model cells showed good mutual binding activity. Further research is needed to evaluate high throughput and a reliable method for screening drugs that block the PD-1 and PD-L1 pathway.
期刊介绍:
Biotechnic & Histochemistry (formerly Stain technology) is the
official publication of the Biological Stain Commission. The journal has been in continuous publication since 1926.
Biotechnic & Histochemistry is an interdisciplinary journal that embraces all aspects of techniques for visualizing biological processes and entities in cells, tissues and organisms; papers that describe experimental work that employs such investigative methods are appropriate for publication as well.
Papers concerning topics as diverse as applications of histochemistry, immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, cytochemical probes, autoradiography, light and electron microscopy, tissue culture, in vivo and in vitro studies, image analysis, cytogenetics, automation or computerization of investigative procedures and other investigative approaches are appropriate for publication regardless of their length. Letters to the Editor and review articles concerning topics of special and current interest also are welcome.