1. Clonogenic Assay: Adherent Cells
- Author
-
George T. Georgiadis, Assam El-Osta, Haloom Rafehi, Tom C. Karagiannis, Christian Orlowski, and Katherine Ververis
- Subjects
Keratinocytes ,Plating efficiency ,biology ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,General Chemical Engineering ,General Neuroscience ,Colony-Forming Units Assay ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cell Line ,HeLa ,Tissue culture ,Cellular Biology ,Radiation sensitivity ,Cell culture ,Immunology ,Cell Adhesion ,Humans ,Cytotoxicity ,Clonogenic assay - Abstract
The clonogenic (or colony forming) assay has been established for more than 50 years; the original paper describing the technique was published in 19561. Apart from documenting the method, the initial landmark study generated the first radiation-dose response curve for X-ray irradiated mammalian (HeLa) cells in culture1. Basically, the clonogenic assay enables an assessment of the differences in reproductive viability (capacity of cells to produce progeny; i.e. a single cell to form a colony of 50 or more cells) between control untreated cells and cells that have undergone various treatments such as exposure to ionising radiation, various chemical compounds (e.g. cytotoxic agents) or in other cases genetic manipulation. The assay has become the most widely accepted technique in radiation biology and has been widely used for evaluating the radiation sensitivity of different cell lines. Further, the clonogenic assay is commonly used for monitoring the efficacy of radiation modifying compounds and for determining the effects of cytotoxic agents and other anti-cancer therapeutics on colony forming ability, in different cell lines. A typical clonogenic survival experiment using adherent cells lines involves three distinct components, 1) treatment of the cell monolayer in tissue culture flasks, 2) preparation of single cell suspensions and plating an appropriate number of cells in petri dishes and 3) fixing and staining colonies following a relevant incubation period, which could range from 1-3 weeks, depending on the cell line. Here we demonstrate the general procedure for performing the clonogenic assay with adherent cell lines with the use of an immortalized human keratinocyte cell line (FEP-1811)2. Also, our aims are to describe common features of clonogenic assays including calculation of the plating efficiency and survival fractions after exposure of cells to radiation, and to exemplify modification of radiation-response with the use of a natural antioxidant formulation.
- Published
- 2011