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Isolation of single intracellular bacterial communities generated from a murine model of urinary tract infection for downstream single-cell analysis
E. Yang, J.L.Y. Chee, , S. Chen, K. Lees, S.L. Chen
Published in Journal of Visualized Experiments
2019
PMID: 31058882
Volume: 2019
   
Issue: 146
Abstract
In this article, we outline a procedure used to isolate individual intracellular bacterial communities from a mouse that has been experimentally infected in the urinary tract. The protocol can be broadly divided into three sections: the infection, bladder epithelial cell harvesting, and mouth micropipetting to isolate individual infected epithelial cells. The isolated epithelial cell contains viable bacterial cells and is nearly free of contaminating extracellular bacteria, making it ideal for downstream single-cell analysis. The time taken from the start of infection to obtaining a single intracellular bacterial community is about 8 h. This protocol is inexpensive to deploy and uses widely available materials, and we anticipate that it can also be utilized in other infection models to isolate single infected cells from cell mixtures even if those infected cells are rare. However, due to a potential risk in mouth micropipetting, this procedure is not recommended for highly infectious agents. © 2019 Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
About the journal
JournalJournal of Visualized Experiments
PublisherJournal of Visualized Experiments
ISSN1940087X