Introduction of genetic material into cells is an essential prerequisite for current research in molecular cell biology. Although transfection with commercially available reagents results in excellent gene expression, their high costs are obstacles to experimentation with a large number or large scales of transfection. The cationic polymer linear-polyethylenimine (MW 25,000) (PEI), one of the most cost-effective vehicles, facilitates DNA compaction by polyplex formation, which leads to efficient delivery of DNA into cells by endocytosis. However, the use of PEI is still limited because of substantial cytotoxicity and intolerable deterioration in transfection efficiency by its low stability. Here, we show that acidification of PEI is important for its transfection activity. Dissolving PEI powder in 0.2N HCl confers a long shelf-life for PEI storage at 4 and -80 degrees C, and the polyplex formation of plasmid DNA with PEI is optimized in lactate-buffered saline at pH 4.0. Furthermore, changing the culture medium at 8-12 h posttransfection can minimize the cytotoxicity of PEI without sacrificing the high transfection efficiency comparable to that of commercial reagents. The cost per test using acidified PEI is drastically reduced to approximately 1:10,000, compared with commercial reagents. Thus, we conclude that acidification of PEI satisfactorily accomplishes cost-effective, high-efficiency transfection.
Src-family tyrosine kinases, which are expressed in various cell types, play critical roles in cell signalling at the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane through their lipid modifications. Src-family kinases are cotranslationally myristoylated and posttranslationally palmitoylated in the amino-terminal region. The Src-family member Lyn contains a myristoylation site at glycine-2 and a palmitoylation site at cysteine-3, whereas c-Src has a myristoylation site at glycine-2 but not any palmitoylation sites. However, little is known about the role for lipid modifications of Src-family kinases in cell division. Here, we show that non-lipid-modified Lyn and c-Src, Lyn(G2A/C3A) and c-Src(G2A), are delocalized from membranes to the cytoplasm and the nucleus, which gives rise to a significant increase in the rate of chromosome missegregation, such as chromosome lagging and anaphase chromosome bridging, in a tyrosine kinase activity-dependent manner. Treatment with the Src inhibitor PP2 shows that the kinase activity of non-lipid-modified, non-membrane-bound Src during M phase is critical for giving rise to chromosome missegregation. Given that only a fraction of Src-family kinases fails in lipid modifications during biosynthesis, these results suggest that Src’s membrane anchorage through their lipid modifications from prophase to anaphase plays a protective role against induction of chromosome missegregation.
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