Eggs, not just for breakfast
The current project that I'm working on is a chicken based model for angiogenesis called CAM (Chorioallantoic Membrane).
It's pretty simple. You buy fertilized eggs, place them in an incubator for a few days, then crack the eggs and add the contents to petri dishes. At this point they've been warm for 3 days and you can start to see some chick development but it's only a wee small thing. Several days later we add drug to some of the petri dishes--right on the yolk--and don't add the drug to the rest so as to have controls. Several days later you compare the controls to the drug added yolks and use that information to determine if the drug affects angiogenesis.
It's a great system because the affect is easily visible and it's fast. Chicks take 21 days to develop from initial fertilization to hatching and we use the eggs for the 3 day to around the 10 day part of that cycle.
I started writing this at 3pm and now it's after midnight. This working for a living is really cramping my posting on here.
Anyway, this CAM assay allows for quick screening of compounds that might have angiogenic qualities. In cancer research you want to stop or slow angiogenesis since cancer tumors need the blood vessel growth to get bigger. On the other hand, cardiologists want drugs that increase angiogenesis since that's the way to heal injured blood vessels. Since I work in a cardiology lab for a cancer surgeon I get to have it both ways. Any change in angiogenesis will work just fine. Too bad most compounds don't affect angiogenesis...
It's pretty simple. You buy fertilized eggs, place them in an incubator for a few days, then crack the eggs and add the contents to petri dishes. At this point they've been warm for 3 days and you can start to see some chick development but it's only a wee small thing. Several days later we add drug to some of the petri dishes--right on the yolk--and don't add the drug to the rest so as to have controls. Several days later you compare the controls to the drug added yolks and use that information to determine if the drug affects angiogenesis.
It's a great system because the affect is easily visible and it's fast. Chicks take 21 days to develop from initial fertilization to hatching and we use the eggs for the 3 day to around the 10 day part of that cycle.
I started writing this at 3pm and now it's after midnight. This working for a living is really cramping my posting on here.
Anyway, this CAM assay allows for quick screening of compounds that might have angiogenic qualities. In cancer research you want to stop or slow angiogenesis since cancer tumors need the blood vessel growth to get bigger. On the other hand, cardiologists want drugs that increase angiogenesis since that's the way to heal injured blood vessels. Since I work in a cardiology lab for a cancer surgeon I get to have it both ways. Any change in angiogenesis will work just fine. Too bad most compounds don't affect angiogenesis...
Comments
If you do find an active compound it would be wonderful.