Autonomously Bioluminescent Mammalian Cells for Continuous and Real-time Monitoring of Cytotoxicity – Journal of Visualized Experiments (2013)

Xu, T., D. M. Close, J. D. Webb, S. A. Ripp and G. S. Sayler

Abstract:

Mammalian cell-based in vitro assays have been widely employed as alternatives to animal testing for toxicological studies but have been limited due to the high monetary and time costs of parallel sample preparation that are necessitated due to the destructive nature of firefly luciferase-based screening methods. This video describes the utilization of autonomously bioluminescent mammalian cells, which do not require the destructive addition of a luciferin substrate, as an inexpensive and facile method for monitoring the cytotoxic effects of a compound of interest. Mammalian cells stably expressing the full bacterial bioluminescence (luxCDABEfrp) gene cassette autonomously produce an optical signal that peaks at 490 nm without the addition of an expensive and possibly interfering luciferin substrate, excitation by an external energy source, or destruction of the sample that is traditionally performed during optical imaging procedures. This independence from external stimulation places the burden for maintaining the bioluminescent reaction solely on the cell, meaning that the resultant signal is only detected during active metabolism. This characteristic makes the lux-expressing cell line an excellent candidate for use as a biosentinel against cytotoxic effects because changes in bioluminescent production are indicative of adverse effects on cellular growth and metabolism. Similarly, the autonomous nature and lack of required sample destruction permits repeated imaging of the same sample in real-time throughout the period of toxicant exposure and can be performed across multiple samples using existing imaging equipment in an automated fashion.

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Citation:

Xu, T., D. M. Close, J. D. Webb, S. A. Ripp and G. S. Sayler (2013). “Autonomously Bioluminescent Mammalian Cells for Continuous and Real- Time Monitoring of Cytotoxicity.” Journal of Visualized Experiments(80): e50972-e50972.