G418 Stable Transfection - (Sep/06/2005 )
I'm having trouble selecting clones for stable transfection.  I have Cos1 cells growing in a 10cm dish and I have been steadily increasing the G418 concentration.  It is now up to 2mg and I still have lots of cells.  I trypsinized a small area and performed PCR for my protein and it was positive.  Is it possible all these cells are positive?  Could it be the G418 is not working?  I made it fresh with H20 and then filtered.  Should I have used PBS?
Thanks
-FlyersFan-
QUOTE (FlyersFan @ Sep 6 2005, 06:32 PM)
I'm having trouble selecting clones for stable transfection.  I have Cos1 cells growing in a 10cm dish and I have been steadily increasing the G418 concentration.  It is now up to 2mg and I still have lots of cells.  I trypsinized a small area and performed PCR for my protein and it was positive.  Is it possible all these cells are positive?  Could it be the G418 is not working?  I made it fresh with H20 and then filtered.  Should I have used PBS?
Thanks
Thanks
2 mg/ml G418 is very high! How long have you been selecting?
And by which method did you do your transfection?
Cos-1 cells contain SV40 large T and are very easy to transfect. Don't be surprised if you hit 80% of your cells.
-Theo22-
I've been selecting for 3 weeks now.  
I used Lipofectamine/Plus Reagent from Invitrogen.
If its possible all these cells are positive, then I guess I will dilute them very highly and plate and hope to be able to pick up a few single colonies?
-FlyersFan-
QUOTE (FlyersFan @ Sep 6 2005, 08:24 PM)
I've been selecting for 3 weeks now.  
I used Lipofectamine/Plus Reagent from Invitrogen.
If its possible all these cells are positive, then I guess I will dilute them very highly and plate and hope to be able to pick up a few single colonies?
I used Lipofectamine/Plus Reagent from Invitrogen.
If its possible all these cells are positive, then I guess I will dilute them very highly and plate and hope to be able to pick up a few single colonies?
Yes, it is very likely that all your cells are positive. You can simply trypsinise your cells and you have made a polyclonal celline.
To isolate monoclonal cell lines, you will have to repeat the transfection in a less efficient way (e.g calcium phosphate transfection, far less specific DNA, mixed with carrier DNA etc.).
Also include a transfection with a plasmid lacking your selection marker, so that you can follow selection in time.
Good Luck
-Theo22-
Thanks so much for your help!!
-FlyersFan-
