KC-1316

CHOK1-CD40L-(CD154)-Cell-Line

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Home » CHOK1-CD40L-(CD154)-Cell-Line

Background of CHOK1-CD40L-(CD154)-Cell-Line

CD154, also named as CD40L ligand, is protein of TNF superfamily, mainly expressed on activated T cell, functioned as CD40 ligand, plays critical in immune response, such as B cell maturation, macrophage activation.

Specifications

Catalog NumberKC-1316
Cell Line NameCHOK1-CD40L-(CD154)-Cell-Line
Host Cell LineChinese hamster ovary CHO-K1 cell line
DescriptionCHO-K1 cell line stable expressing exogenous human CD154 gene
QuantityTwo vials of frozen cells (≥2-106/vial)
StabilityStable in culture over a minimum of 10 passages
ApplicationDrug screening and biological assays
Freezing Medium70% RPMI1640+20% FBS+10% DMSO
Propagation MediumRPMI1640+10%FBS+5µg/mL Puromycin
Selection MarkerPuromycin
MorphologyEpithelial-like
SubcultureSplit saturated culture 1:4-1:8 every 2-3 days; seed out at about 1-2 × 105 cells/mL
Incubation37 °C with 5% CO2
StorageLiquid nitrogen immediately upon receiving
Doubling TimeApproximately 24 hours
Mycoplasma StatusNegative
In Vivo ValidationNA

Cell Line Generation

CHO-K1 human CD154 cell line was generated using lentiviral vector expressing human CD154 sequence.

Characterization

Cell Resuscitation

  1. Prewarm culture medium (F12K + 10% FBS + 5µg/mL Puromycin) in a 37°C water bath.
  2. Thaw the frozen vial in a 37°C water bath for 1-2 minutes.
  3. Transfer the vial into biosafety cabinet, and wipe the surface with 70% ethanol.
  4. Unscrew the top of the vial and transfer the cell suspension gently into a sterile centrifuge tube containing 9.0mL complete culture medium.
  5. Spin at ~ 125 × g for 5-7 minutes at room temperature, and discard the supernatant without disturbing the pellet.
  6. Resuspend cell pellet with the appropriate volume of complete medium and transfer the cell suspension into a T25 culture flask.
  7. Incubate the flask at 37°C, 5% CO2 incubator.
  8. Split saturated culture 1:4-1:8 every 2-3 days; seed out at about 1-2 × 105 cells/mL.

Cell Freezing

  1. Prepare the freezing medium (70% F12K + 20% FBS + 10% DMSO) fresh immediately before use.
  2. Keep the freezing medium on ice and label cryovials.
  3. Transfer cells to a sterile, conical centrifuge tube, and count the cells.
  4. Centrifuge the cells at 250×g for 5 minutes at room temperature and carefully aspirate off the medium.
  5. Resuspend the cells at a density of at least 3×106 cells/mL in chilled freezing medium.
  6. Aliquot 1 mL of the cell suspension into each cryovial.
  7. Freeze cells in the CoolCell freezing container overnight in a -80°C freezer.
  8. Transfer vials to liquid nitrogen for long-term storage

References

  1. Lederman S, Yellin MJ, Krichevsky A, Belko J, Lee JJ, Chess L (April 1992). "Identification of a novel surface protein on activated CD4+ T cells that induces contact-dependent B cell differentiation (help)". The Journal of Experimental Medicine. 175 (4): 1091ÿ101.
  2. Lederman S, Yellin MJ, Inghirami G, Lee JJ, Knowles DM, Chess L (December 1992). "Molecular interactions mediating T-B lymphocyte collaboration in human lymphoid follicles. Roles of T cell-B-cell-activating molecule (5c8 antigen) and CD40 in contact-dependent help". Journal of Immunology. 149 (12): 3817ÿ26.
  3. Lederman S, Yellin MJ, Cleary AM, Pernis A, Inghirami G, Cohn LE, Covey LR, Lee JJ, Rothman P, Chess L (March 1994). "T-BAM/CD40-L on helper T lymphocytes augments lymphokine-induced B cell Ig isotype switch recombination and rescues B cells from programmed cell death". Journal of Immunology. 152 (5): 2163ÿ71.
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