The Bioreagent and Cell Culture Core Facility supports cancer related research that requires in vitro experiments, provides reagents for cell culture and prepares bioreagents that are produced by cells grown in the facility. Recently, the Cell Culture Core facility was reorganized to introduce new services of producing bioreagents that were identified as high priority by the investigators during last year's survey. The Core Facility now grows suspension cultures of hybridoma cells in large quantities and produces purified monoclonal antibodies. A recently acquired News Brunswick Bioreactor made the growing of cells in large quantities possible at substantial savings. The facility is in the process of developing and evaluating lipofectin preparations for cell transfection at highly reduced costs. Additional available services are the preparation of specialized serum products, LB matrix coated culture dishes, and Ampicillin /R plates. Studies will be conducted to evaluated the feasibility of producing recombinant proteins, cytokines and growth factors. The Core Facility continues to provide established services of cell culture media preparations in large batches and their distribution at five convenient locations, testing for mycoplasma contaminations, drug testing using cytotoxity and cell proliferation assays, bulk purchase of tissue culture additives, growing attached cells in large quantities using roller bottles, and provides assistance in all techniques related to cell cultures. The Facility is one of the most widely used shared resources, utilized by 62 faculty members, and provides substantial savings of 45% to 90%.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
2P30CA014089-26
Application #
6443835
Study Section
Project Start
1980-04-01
Project End
2005-11-30
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
26
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$91,598
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Southern California
Department
Type
DUNS #
041544081
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90089
Khanova, Elena; Wu, Raymond; Wang, Wen et al. (2018) Pyroptosis by caspase11/4-gasdermin-D pathway in alcoholic hepatitis in mice and patients. Hepatology 67:1737-1753
McSkane, Michelle; Stintzing, Sebastian; Heinemann, Volker et al. (2018) Association Between Height and Clinical Outcome in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer Patients Enrolled Onto a Randomized Phase 3 Clinical Trial: Data From the FIRE-3 Study. Clin Colorectal Cancer 17:215-222.e3
Tokunaga, Ryuma; Cao, Shu; Naseem, Madiha et al. (2018) Prognostic Effect of Adenosine-related Genetic Variants in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer Treated With Bevacizumab-based Chemotherapy. Clin Colorectal Cancer :
Brunette, Laurie L; Mhawech-Fauceglia, Paulette Y; Ji, Lingyun et al. (2018) Validity and prognostic significance of sperm protein 17 as a tumor biomarker for epithelial ovarian cancer: a retrospective study. BMC Cancer 18:970
Poulard, Coralie; Baulu, Estelle; Lee, Brian H et al. (2018) Increasing G9a automethylation sensitizes B acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells to glucocorticoid-induced death. Cell Death Dis 9:1038
Lang, Julie E; Brownson, Kirstyn E (2018) ASO Author Reflections: The Whole Transcriptome Landscape of Circulating Tumor Cells in Nonmetastatic Breast Cancer. Ann Surg Oncol :
Milam, Joel; Slaughter, Rhona; Tobin, Jessica L et al. (2018) Childhood Cancer Survivorship and Substance Use Behaviors: A Matched Case-Control Study Among Hispanic Adolescents and Young Adults. J Adolesc Health 63:115-117
Guo, Yu; Perez, Andrew A; Hazelett, Dennis J et al. (2018) CRISPR-mediated deletion of prostate cancer risk-associated CTCF loop anchors identifies repressive chromatin loops. Genome Biol 19:160
Suenaga, Mitsukuni; Schirripa, Marta; Cao, Shu et al. (2018) Potential role of PIN1 genotypes in predicting benefit from oxaliplatin-based and irinotecan-based treatment in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Pharmacogenomics J 18:623-632
Singh, Hardeep P; Wang, Sijia; Stachelek, Kevin et al. (2018) Developmental stage-specific proliferation and retinoblastoma genesis in RB-deficient human but not mouse cone precursors. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E9391-E9400

Showing the most recent 10 out of 842 publications