6.1 Cell Biology Methods Flashcards
What is tissue culture?
A terminology for procedures used for maintenance and growth of
cells or organs in an artificial and aseptic environment.
What is an explants culture?
the culture of the whole or garments of an organ to study the development.
What helped scientist improve tissue culture?
- The use of antibiotics to control contamination;
- Development of chemically defined, nutrient-rich media to grow cell
lines; - The use of trypsin (protease) and collagenase to remove cells from the
tissue and the plastic vessel
What are trypsin and collagenase?
digestive enzymes used to break down small tissue pieces into even smaller size.
These enzymes degrade proteins that hold cells together but don’t’ degrade proteins that are inside the cell.
Cells are incubated in what type of atmosphere?
one that contains about 5% carbon dioxide b/c it mimics the conditions found in the body more than ambient air.
What are the advantages of cell cultures and what can be studied with cell cultures?
Advantage: cells are generally much more accessible for studies like microscopy than they would be in an animal and it’s possible to grow large quantities of an individual cell type for analysis.
-because cells properties including shape, genes, proteins, cell origin and function are maintained in a culture, scientist can study the biological activity of these cells and their proteins, gene expression patterns, as well as what these cells might have been doing in the animals own organs.
What are the disadvantages of cell cultures?
-in many cases, the cells don’t behave in a culture exactly the way they do in the animal and therefore, scientist always have to consider whether their results reflect natural cell behaviors or, instead, artifacts caused by the cell culture environment.
What are primary cells and why are they used by scientist?
- primary cells are cells obtained directly from tissues of an animal
- they are used by scientist who are concerned about the effects of long-term cell culture on the behavior of cells.
What are the disadvantage of primary cells?
-The isolation of cells from tissues is time consuming and the
source of tissues may be rare.
-In addition, primary cells change dramatically over time as they
adapt to a cell culture condition.
-Primary cells also have a finite life span
How often do cultured cells divide? what does this mean?
it divides about once every 24 hours. This means each division is a new generation of cells.
What happens when cells in a dish covered the entire surface of the dish? what is the removal process called?
When cells grow over the entire surface of the dish they must be removed from the bottom of the dish and a portion of them added to a new dish in order to seed new growth. This is called passing cells.
How many generations do primary cells usually survive?
about 25-50 cell generations and after that almost all of the cells die.
How can cells be “immortalized”?
many cancer cells are immortal so introducing cancer-causing genes (oncogenes or telomerase genes) into them can immortalize non-cancerous cells
What is the issue with non-cancerous cells being made immortal?
some of the cancer genes (oncogenes or telomerase) dramatically change the behavior of the cells they are expressed in.
What are HeLa cells?
are human cervical carcinomas cells isolated from a woman
named Henrietta Lax who died of her cancer in 1951. It’s thought that more of Ms. Lax cells had
been produced after her death than were in her body while she was alive although this is possibly
an urban-legend. However, what’s interesting is that her cells were propagated without her
knowledge or consent and there was a subsequent lawsuit which was decided against her ruling
that her cells were no longer her property once they had been removed as a consequence of a
medical procedure for which she had given her consent. So there are some interesting ethical
issues that are around in cell biology
What is contact inhibition of growth? &anchorage-dependence of growth?
this means cells don’t normally continue to divide when they are surrounded by others cells and they have to be attached to a surface in order to survive
Which cells escaper contact inhibition of growth?
cancer cells and cells that have some active oncogenes expressed in them. Thy are anchorage dependent