Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1175104 Analytical Biochemistry 2010 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Recently, it has been shown that commercial human thyroid lines were in fact derived from colon, mammary carcinoma, or melanoma. Others have demonstrated the absence of a common pattern of gene expression between available thyroid cancer cell lines and tumors from patients. Thus, it is important to use several primary cells with a common pathological origin to achieve reproducible results, and it is necessary to find common methods for manipulation of protein expression in such various cultures. We have standardized a transfection method for efficient expression of exogenous proteins in human primary thyroid cultures. We compared lipid-based techniques with three electroporation systems (Electroporator PulseAgile [PA]-4000, Microporator MP-100, and Nucleofector II). Nucleofection was unquestionably the most efficient even for promoter regulation studies, and it was effective in cultures from different origins as normal thyroid, papillary carcinoma, or lymphoid node metastasis. We also standardized, through lentiviral infection, the short hairpin RNA downregulation of protein expression generating human thyrocytes with low levels of p27KIP1 as a model system.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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