Affiliation:
1. University College London Department of Biochemical Engineering , , Bernard Katz Building, London WC1E 6BT , UK
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We report data consistent with tetracycline-mediated fluorescence having the potential to be an effective marker of senescence in immortalised cells. HeLa cells that had previously undergone more than 20 passages were transiently transfected with a plasmid encoding a novel tetracycline-inducible transgene featuring an open reading frame for green fluorescent protein. While characterising the performance of this plasmid and transfection procedure, HeLa cell fluorescence was observed to result from incubating cells with media containing 2 μg/ml tetracycline alone, without plasmid or transfection reagent. To investigate this phenomenon further, HeLa and HEK293T cells were purchased from a tissue culture collection and after cultivation over 4-23 passages, incubated with media containing 2 μg/ml tetracycline. For both cell lines, tetracycline-mediated fluorescence increase correlated with passage number increase. This effect in HeLa and HEK293T cells was also borne out by expression of β-galactosidase activity, an imperfect but widely used marker of cellular senescence. These data suggest tetracycline may have utility as a marker of cellular senescence in immortal cells and can inform future investigation and validation of this previously unreported application for this reagent.
Funder
University College London
Publisher
The Company of Biologists
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology