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XB-ART-40706
Environ Sci Technol 2009 Dec 01;4323:8895-900. doi: 10.1021/es9008954.
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An innovative continuous flow system for monitoring heavy metal pollution in water using transgenic Xenopus laevis tadpoles.

Fini JB , Pallud-Mothré S , Le Mével S , Palmier K , Havens CM , Le Brun M , Mataix V , Lemkine GF , Demeneix BA , Turque N , Johnson PE .


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While numerous detection methods exist for environmental heavy metal monitoring, easy-to-use technologies combining rapidity with in vivo measurements are lacking. Multiwell systems exploiting transgenic tadpoles are ideal but require time-consuming placement of individuals in wells. We developed a real-time flow-through system, based on Fountain Flow cytometry, which measures in situ contaminant-induced fluorescence in transgenic amphibian larvae immersed in water samples. The system maintains the advantages of transgenic amphibians, but requires minimal human intervention. Portable and self-contained, it allows on-site measurements. Optimization exploited a transgenic Xenopus laevis bearing a chimeric gene with metal responsive elements fused to eGFP. The transgene was selectively induced by 1 microM Zn(2+). Using this tadpole we show the continuous flow method to be as rapid and sensitive as image analysis. Flow-through readings thus accelerate the overall process of data acquisition and render fluorescent monitoring of tadpoles suitable for on-site tracking of heavy metal pollution.

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