The electrophoretic resolution of seven relatively polymorphic human gene-enzyme systems expressed in tissue culture cells can be used as a sensitive genetic monitor for intraspecific cell contamination. An identical genotype at each of the same allozyme loci provides a 95% (or greater) confindence estimate of the identity of two cultured lines, on the basis of the allelic frequencies of the seven enzyme loci in natural populations and in populations of independently derived cultured cells. Of 27 commonly used human cell lines examined, only one of 351 pairwise comparisons proved genetically indistinguishable.
The production of human gamma-interferon (HuIFN-gamma) in unfractionated and nylon wool column-fractionated leukocyte cell cultures stimulated with PMA and PHA was investigated. Production was studied with normal and reduced autologous serum protein levels in 96-hr spinner cultures. A 10- to 15-fold enhancement of production and a 50-fold increase in specific activity of crude HuIFN-gamma was demonstrated in nylon column-fractionated/reduced serum cell cultures. Kinetic analysis revealed a production rate maximum within 6 hr of induction in unprocessed cell cultures, whereas production occurred at an essentially constant rate for 48 hr in fractionated cell cultures.
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