Vero cell

Jump to navigation Jump to search
File:Vero cells.jpg
Phase-contrast microscopic image of Vero cells. (under green light. 100-fold magnification.)

Vero cells are lineages of cells used in cell cultures.[1]

The Vero lineage was isolated from kidney epithelial cells extracted from African green monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops). The lineage was developed on 27 Mar 1962, by Yasumura and Kawakita at the Chiba University in Chiba, Japan. [2] The original cell line was named after an acronym of "Verda Reno" and was matched to the word "Vero", which means "green kidney" and "truth" in esperanto, respectively.[3]

Vero cells are used for many purposes, including:

The Vero cell lineage is continuous and aneuploid. A continuous cell lineage can be replicated through many cycles of division and not become senescent.[4] Aneuploidy is the characteristic of having an abnormal number of chromosomes.

Lineages

Isolated from C. aethiops kidney on 27 Mar 1962.
Isolated from Vero in 1968.
This line is a clone from Vero 76.
  • Research strains transfected with viral genes:
Vero F6 is a cell transfected with the gene encoding HHV-1 entry protein Glycoprotein-H (gH).[5] Vero F6 was transfected via a concatenated plasmid with the gH gene after a copy of the HHV-1 Glycoprotein-D (gD) promoter region. In Vero lineage F6, expression of gH is under the control of the promoter region of gD. (Also F6B2; obs. F6B1.1)

References

  1. History and Characterization of the Vero Cell Line -- A Report prepared by CDR Rebecca Sheets, Ph.D., USPHS CBER/OVRR/DVRPA/VVB for the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee Meeting to be held on May 12, 2000 OPEN SESSION www.fda.gov pdf
  2. Yasumura Y, Kawakita M (1963). "The research for the SV40 by means of tissue culture technique". Nippon Rinsho. 21 (6): 1201&ndash, 1219.
  3. Shimizu B (1993). Seno K, Koyama H, Kuroki T, ed. Manual of selected cultured cell lines for bioscience and biotechnology (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kyoritsu Shuppan. pp. 299–300. ISBN 4-320-05386-9.
  4. "Main Types of Cell Culture". Fundamental Techniques in Cell Culture: a Laboratory Handbook. Retrieved 2006-09-28.
  5. Forrester A, Farrell H, Wilkinson G, Kaye J, Davis-Poynter N, Minson T (1992). "Construction and properties of a mutant of herpes simplex virus type 1 with glycoprotein H coding sequences deleted". J Virol. 66 (1): 341–8. PMID 1309250.


Template:WikiDoc Sources