Journal article
Qualitative in vivo Bioluminescence Imaging
Devbarna Sinha, Zalitha Pieterse, Pritinder Kaur
BIO-PROTOCOL | BIO-PROTOCOL | Published : 2018
Abstract
Bioluminescence imaging (BLI) technology is an advanced method of carrying out molecular imaging on live laboratory animals in vivo. This powerful technique is widely-used in studying a variety of biological processes, and it has been an ideal tool in exploring tumor growth and metastatic spread in real-time. This technique ensures the optimal use of laboratory animal resources, particularly the ethical principle of reduction in animal use, given its non-invasive nature, ensuring that ongoing biological processes can be studied over time in the same animal, without the need to euthanize groups of mice at specific time points. In this protocol, the luciferase imaging technique was developed t..
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Grants
Awarded by Cancer Council of Victoria
Awarded by NHMRC
Funding Acknowledgements
The techniques described in this article were optimized during research work supported by grants from the CASS Foundation, Cancer Council of Victoria #807184 and the NHMRC #1025874 to PK; and an International HDR Ph.D. scholarship from ANU, Canberra to DS. We thank Prof Robin Anderson and Dr. Clare Slaney for valuable discussions and technical advice on BLI. ZP and PK are supported by funds awarded by the Faculty of Health Sciences, Curtin University. This protocol was adapted from a previous study from our laboratory published in Clinical cancer Research (Sinha et al., 2016).