Bouin’s fixative is a particularly good choice for worms because it penetrates dense tissues well and is extremely good for fixing antigens. Like all strong fixatives, however, it is unsuitable for some antibody-antigen pairs. In such cases, the length of time in the Bouin’s fixative can be shortened, or paraformaldehyde fixation can be used instead. - [Read Fixing Caenorhabditis elegans in Bouin’s Fixative Protocol]
Acidocalcisomes, the dense acidic calcium-storing organelles, which were originally identified in Trypanosoma cruzi, have no parallels in mammalian cells. They thus represent a unique functional characteristic, not shared by the host and hence offer an important potential target for chemotherapy of Chagas disease. - [Read Fractionation of Acidocalcisomes and Other Organelles from Trypanosoma, Leishmania, Chlamydomonas]
This protocol a protocol on how to generate transfected embryonic stem (ES) cell clones. The previous protocol in this series is the Protocol for Electroporation of ES cells. The next protocol in the series is the Protocol on Disaggregation, Expansion, and Freezing of Transfected ES Clones.