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pubmed-article:2903855pubmed:abstractTextCross-culture contamination of cell lines propagated in continuous culture is a frequent event and particularly difficult to resolve in cells expressing similar phenotypes. We demonstrate that DNA-DNA hybridization to blotted endonuclease-digested cell DNA effectively detects cross-culture contamination to monitor inter-species as well as intra-species cross contamination. An insulin-producing cell-line, Clone-16, originally cloned from a human fetal endocrine pancreatic cell line did not produce human c-peptide as anticipated. DNA from these cells showed no hybridization to the human ALU sequence probe, BLUR, and lacked restriction fragment length polymorphism typical for the human HLA-DQ beta-chain gene. Although a human insulin gene probe showed a weak, nonhuman hybridization pattern, a cDNA probe for the Syrian hamster insulin gene hybridized strongly consistent with a single copy hamster insulin gene. Karyotyping confirmed the absence of human chromosomes in the Clone-16 cells while sizes, centromere indices, and banding patterns were identical to Syrian hamster fibroblasts. We conclude that the insulin-producing Clone-16 cells are of Syrian hamster origin and demonstrate the effective use of gene probes to control the origin of cell cultures.lld:pubmed
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pubmed-article:2903855pubmed:pagination1071-6lld:pubmed
pubmed-article:2903855pubmed:dateRevised2011-11-17lld:pubmed
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pubmed-article:2903855pubmed:articleTitleGene probes to detect cross-culture contamination in hormone producing cell lines.lld:pubmed
pubmed-article:2903855pubmed:affiliationHagedorn Research Laboratory, Gentofte, Denmark.lld:pubmed
pubmed-article:2903855pubmed:publicationTypeJournal Articlelld:pubmed
pubmed-article:2903855pubmed:publicationTypeResearch Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.lld:pubmed
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