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Growing Cells in Culture

Growing Cells in Culture. Part 1: Terminology. Cell Culture. The maintenance of cells outside of the living animal ( in vitro ) for easier experimental manipulation and regulation of controls. Pros Use of animals reduced In vitro models allow for control of the extracellular environment

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Growing Cells in Culture

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  1. Growing Cells in Culture Part 1: Terminology

  2. Cell Culture The maintenance of cells outside of the living animal (in vitro) for easier experimental manipulation and regulation of controls.

  3. Pros • Use of animals reduced • In vitro models allow for control of the extracellular environment • Able to monitor various secretions without interference from other biological molecules that occurs in vivo • Cons • Removal of cells from their in vivo environment means removing the cells, hormones, support structures and various other chemicals that the cells interact with in vivo. • It is nearly impossible to recreate the in vivo environment.

  4. Classification of Cell Cultures • Primary Culture • Cells taken directly from a tissue to a dish • Cells taken from a primary culture and passed or divided in vitro. • These cells have a limited number of divisions or passages. After the limit, they will undergo apoptosis. • Apoptosis is programmed cell death

  5. Primary culture from Poeciliopsis lucida (the desert topminnow)

  6. Making a Primary Culture

  7. Cell Lines • Cell Line • Cells that have undergone a mutation and won’t undergo apoptosis after a limited number of passages. They will grow indefinitely.. Good model system? • Transformed cell line • A cell line that has been transformed by a tumor inducing virus or chemical. Can cause tumors if injected into animal. Good model? • Hybrid cell line (hybridoma) • Two cell types fused together with characteristics of each. Good model?

  8. Our Cell Lines • MCF-7 –estrogen receptors expressed , alpha > beta • MDA-MB-231- beta estrogen receptors expressed • Breast Cancer • ATCC • http://www.atcc.org/

  9. Growing Cells in Culture Part 2: Understanding Cell Behavior

  10. Confluency • How “covered” the growing surface appears • This is usually a guess • Optimal confluency for moving cells to a new dish is 70-80% • Too low, cells will be in lag phase and won’t proliferate. Sense nearest neighbor. • Too high and cells will stop dividing or pile on one another in tumor like formation.

  11. Contact Inhibition • When cells contact each other, they cease their growth. • Cells arrest in G0 phase of the cell cycle • Transformed cells may continue to proliferate and pile upon each other • May overgrow and die

  12. Anchorage Dependence • Cells that attach to surfaces in vivo require a surface to attach to in vitro. • Other cells (feeder layer) or specially treated plastic or other biologically active coatings • Some may grow in suspension as well as spheroids (unusual)

  13. Passage number • The number of times the cells have been removed (or “split”) from the plate and re-plated. • Always write this on your plate or flask as “P#” for the passage number.

  14. Growing Cells in Culture Part 3: Solutions used in cell culture

  15. Cell Culture Media • A. Bulk ions - Na, K, Ca, Mg, Cl, P, Bicarb or CO2B. Trace elements - iron, zinc, seleniumC. Sugars - glucose is the most commonD. Amino acids - 13 essentialE. Vitamins F. Choline, inositol (cell structure and membrane integrity)G. Serum H. Antibiotics - although not required for cell growth, antibiotics are often used to control the growth of bacterial and fungal contaminants.

  16. Fetal Bovine Serum • Contains a large number of growth promoting activities such as buffering toxic nutrients by binding them, neutralizes trypsin and other proteases, has undefined effects on the interaction between cells and substrate, and contains peptide hormones or hormone-like growth factors that promote healthy growth.

  17. Trypsin EDTA • An enzyme used to detach the cells from a culture dish. • Trypsin cleaves peptide bonds (LYS or ARG) in fibronectin of the extracellular matrix. • EDTA chelates calcium ions in the media that would normally inhibit trypsin. • Trypsin will self digest and become ineffective if left in water bath more than 20 minutes. • Trypsinizing cells too long will reduce cell viability

  18. Trypan Blue-ViCell • An exclusion dye • Living cells cannot take up the dye and will appear bright and refractile. • Dead cells with broken membranes will absorb the dye and appear blue. • Usually add 200 ml of trypan blue to 200 ml of cell suspension in eppendorf tube

  19. 70% Ethanol • Decontamination of work surfaces and incubator interiors. • 100% ethanol may be used as a solvent as may methanol and DMSO. • How do you make 70% ethanol?

  20. Bleach • Used to destroy any remaining cells in dishes and tubes before they are tossed in the trash can (10% bleach). • Add enough to change media to clear, • wait 5 minutes, • rinse solution down sink • throw away the dish/flask/plate in the trash can.

  21. Growing Cells in Culture Part 4 : Equipment

  22. CO2 incubator • Maintains CO2 level (5-10%), humidity and temperature (37o C) to simulate in vivo conditions. • Humidity helps maintain pH

  23. Inverted Phase Microscope • A phase contrast microscope with objectives below the specimen. • A phase plate with an annulus will aid in exploiting differences in refractive indices in different areas of the cells and surrounding areas, creating contrast

  24. A comparison Phase contrast microscopy Light microscopy Can be used on living cells requires stain, thus killing cells

  25. Biological Safety Cabinet • The primary purpose of a BSC is to serve as the primary means to protect the laboratory worker and the surrounding environment from pathogens. All exhaust air is HEPA-filtered as it exits the biosafety cabinet, removing harmful bacteria and viruses. We are biosafety level 2 but only work within biosafety level 1.

  26. Centrifuge • Puts an object in rotation around a fixed axis, applying a force perpendicular to the axis.

  27. Microplate Reader • Designed to detect biological, chemical or physical events of samples in microtiter plates. • Common detection modes for microplate assays are absorbance, fluorescence intensity, luminescence.

  28. Basic cell culture instructions

  29. Aseptic Technique • For best results in tissue culture, we want to work to keep microbial (bacteria, yeast and molds) contamination to a minimum. To do this, there are certain things you must be aware of and guidelines to follow. • Work in a culture hood set-aside for tissue culture purposes. Most have filtered air that blows across the surface to keep microbes from settling in the hood. Turn off the UV/antimicrobial light and turn on the hood 30 minutes prior to entering the hood.

  30. Wash hands with soap and water before beginning the procedure and rewash if you touch anything that is not sterile or within the hood. Wear gloves!! • Spray down your gloves, work surface, and anything that will go into the hood with 70% ethanol. Rewipe at intervals if you are working for a long time in the hood. This will reduce the numbers of bacteria and mold considerably. • Do not breathe directly into your cultures, bottles of media, etc. This also means to keep talking to a minimum. No singing or chewing gum.

  31. Work as quickly as you can within limits of your coordination. Also, keep bottles and flasks closed when you are not working with them. Avoid passing your arm or hand over an open bottle. • Use only sterilized pipets, plates, flasks and bottles in the hood for procedures. • Take special precautions with the sterile pipets. Remove them from the package just before use. Make certain to set up the numbers on the pipet so that they face you. Never mouth-pipet, use the pipetting aid. Change pipets for each manipulation. If the tip of the pipet touches something outside of the flask or bottle, replace with a new one. Never use a pipet twice.

  32. Basic Cell Culture Procedure for Anchorage Dependent Cells • View cells using inverted phase microscope • Aseptically aspirate media • Rinse residual media with 2.5mL trypsin, remove • Add 2.5mL Trypsin to cells • Incubate cells at 37° C for 3 minutes • Agitate and view on phase microscope for floating cells, strike flask if still adherent • Resuspend cells with minimal fresh media • Take sample and count cells (VICell) • Calculate how many cells are needed to add to new plate or flask

  33. Remember • Some volumes don’t need to be exact in cell culture • Rinsing volume of trypsin (as long as it fits in the dish and is sufficient to rinse the serum). • Volume of trypsin as long a bottom of plate or flask can be covered. • Volume of media used to resuspend your cells. The same number of cells will be there despite the volume of media used. • Too little resuspension media will result in very high cell count and would require more dilution (and higher dilution factor). The volume needed to seed your next plate would then be very small, maybe too small to work with. • Too much media would result in low cell count/ml and you may need a large volume to add to your new plate.

  34. Troubleshooting Low Hemacytometer Counts

  35. Trypsinization not complete • Trypsin is ineffective • too cold, be sure to warm sufficiently • self digested or expired check date, don't warm too long • too much serum left on plate -rinse plate thoroughly with trypsin

  36. Trypsinization technique • Trypsin doesn't coat plate, completely add full 2.5 mL’s, lay flask down for 3 minutes at 37ºC, • not left long enough in incubator depends on cell line HACAT can go 8 minutes • flask may need to be tapped or slapped to facilitate cell removal(this varies by cell line)

  37. Six Essential Calculations

  38. Hemacytometer • Specialized chamber with etched grid used to count the number of cells in a sample. • use of trypan blue allows differentiation between living and dead cells

  39. Using the Hemacytometer • Remove the hemacytometer and coverslip (carefully) from EtOH and dry thoroughly with a kimwipe. • Center coverslip on hemacytometer • Barely fill the grid under the coverslip via the divet with your cell suspension. • Count cells in ten squares (5 on each side) by following diagram at station.

  40. Looking at the grid under the phase contrast microscope

  41. How the cells will appear • Bright refractile “spheres” are living cells, • Blue cells about the same size as the other cells are dead. • Keep a differential count of blue vs. clear for viability determination. • Sometimes there will be serum debris, and this will look red or blue and stringy or gloppy--don’t count it! These are blood cells, You will not have this many

  42. Count 10 squares Any 10 will do but we will follow convention Watch for stringy, reddish material—those aren’t cells! serum

  43. Top group Count cells that touch top and left lines DO NOT Count cells that touch bottom and right lines

  44. Bottom Group

  45. Calculate your cells/ml • Calculate the number of total cells in one ml of your suspension. Total cells counted x (dilution factor) x (10,000) number of squares • Here, dilution factor is 2 and # of squares is 10 (our example 62/10 x2 x104 =1.24 x 105)

  46. Determine your percent viability • Viability is a measure how many of your cells survived your cell culture technique. # of viable (living) cells x 100 total number of cells counted Our example 54/62 x 100 =87.09%

  47. Calculate total # of cells in original suspension Number of cells per ml x total mls of original suspension Let’s assume 10ml original suspension 1.24 x105 x 10 =1.24 x 106 cell total Total # of viable cells available in original suspension Total number of cells in original suspension x % viability 1.24x106 x 87% =1.08x 106 viable cells in the original suspension

  48. Determine the number of cells you need to add to your flask • You want the cells to grow happily without overcrowding (or being too sparse) before the next time you come into class. • Using the calculation on the next slide, figure out the number of cells needed for the size of vessel being used • You need to take into account: • length of time cells are to be grown. • the size of the cells (not directly in the formula) • their doubling time

  49. An Exercise • You will be using a T-25 flask and using cells that have a doubling time of 18 hours • X is the number of cells you want by the time you return to passage them (right column of table, next slide) • X0 is the number of cells that were seeded (we want to solve for this right now) • t is the time since plating (hours until the next passaging) • td is the doubling time of the cell line.

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