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Boston College

9 ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN JoVE

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Neuroscience

High Density Event-related Potential Data Acquisition in Cognitive Neuroscience
Scott D. Slotnick 1
1Department of Psychology, Boston College

Event-related potential (ERP) recording is under utilized in Cognitive Neuroscience because data acquisition techniques are not readily available and this method often has poor spatial resolution. To foster the increased use of ERPs in Cognitive Neuroscience, the present article details key techniques involved in high density ERP data acquisition.

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Immunology and Infection

A Genetic Screen to Isolate Toxoplasma gondii Host-cell Egress Mutants
Bradley I. Coleman 1, Marc-Jan Gubbels 1
1Department of Biology, Boston College

Forward genetics is a powerful method to unravel the molecular level of how Toxoplasma egresses from its host cell. Protocols are provided to chemically mutagenize parasites, enrich for mutants with defects in induced egress, and validate the phenotype of cloned mutants.

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Neuroscience

Neural Explant Cultures from Xenopus laevis
Laura Anne Lowery 1, Anna E.R. Faris 1, Alina Stout 1, David Van Vactor 1
1Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School

Culturing neural explants from dissected Xenopus laevis embryos that express fluorescent fusion proteins allows for imaging of growth cone cytoskeletal dynamics.

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Chemistry

Le Châtelier's Principle
Lynne O'Connell 1
1Boston College

Le Châtelier's Principle

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Behavior

Eye Tracking, Cortisol, and a Sleep vs. Wake Consolidation Delay: Combining Methods to Uncover an Interactive Effect of Sleep and Cortisol on Memory
Kelly A. Bennion 1, Katherine R. Mickley Steinmetz 2, Elizabeth A. Kensinger 1, Jessica D. Payne 3
1Department of Psychology, Boston College, 2Department of Psychology, Wofford College, 3Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame

We present a protocol used to discover an interactive effect between sleep and cortisol on memory consolidation, particularly for negative arousing images. Specifically, the experimental design utilizes eye tracking, salivary cortisol analysis, and behavioral memory testing – methods that can be used with both healthy and clinical participants.

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Biology

Using plusTipTracker Software to Measure Microtubule Dynamics in Xenopus laevis Growth Cones
Alina Stout 1, Salvatore D'Amico 1, Tiffany Enzenbacher 1, Patrick Ebbert 1, Laura Anne Lowery 1
1Department of Biology, Boston College

The MATLAB-based, open source software package, plusTipTracker, can be used to analyze image series of fluorescently-labeled +TIPs to quantify microtubule dynamics.

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Biology

RNAi Trigger Delivery into Anopheles gambiae Pupae
Kimberly Regna 1, Rachel M. Harrison 1, Shannon A. Heyse 1, Thomas C. Chiles 1, Kristin Michel 2, Marc A. T. Muskavitch 1,3
1Biology Department, Boston College, 2Division of Biology, Kansas State University, 3Discovery Research, Biogen

RNA interference (RNAi) is an extremely valuable tool for uncovering gene function. However, the ability to target genes using RNAi during pre-adult stages is limited in the major human malaria vector Anopheles gambiae. We describe an RNAi protocol to reduce gene function via direct injection during pupal development.

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Biochemistry

Synthesis of 1,2-Azaborines and the Preparation of Their Protein Complexes with T4 Lysozyme Mutants
Hyelee Lee 1, Shih-Yuan Liu 1
1Department of Chemistry, Boston College

A protocol for the synthesis of 1,2-azaborines and the preparation of their protein complexes with T4 lysozyme mutants is presented.

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Developmental Biology

A Drosophila Model to Study Wound-induced Polyploidization
Erin C. Bailey *1, Ari S. Dehn *1, Kayla J. Gjelsvik 2, Rose Besen-McNally 1, Vicki P. Losick 1
1Biology Department, Boston College, 2Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and Engineering and Kathryn W. Davis Center for Regenerative Biology and Medicine, MDI Biological Laboratory, University of Maine

Wound-induced polyploidization is a conserved tissue repair strategy where cells grow in size instead of dividing to compensate for cell loss. Here is a detailed protocol on how to use the fruit fly as a model to measure ploidy and its genetic regulation in epithelial wound repair.

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