| Literature DB >> 34430908 |
Liwei Zhao1,2, Peng Liu1,2, Wei Xie1,2,3, Shuai Zhang1,2,3, Sebastian Thieme4, Laurence Zitvogel5,6,7,8, Guido Kroemer1,2,8,9,10, Oliver Kepp1,2.
Abstract
Here, we describe a protocol for CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene knockout in conditionally immortalized immature dendritic cells (DCs), which can be limitlessly expanded before differentiation. This facilitates the genetic screening of DC functions in vitro including assessment of phagocytosis, cytokine production, expression of co-stimulatory or co-inhibitory molecules, and antigen presentation, as well as evaluation of the capacity to elicit anticancer immune responses in vivo. Altogether, these approaches described in this protocol allow investigators to link the genotype of DCs to their phenotype. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Le Naour et al. (2020).Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; cell biology; cell culture; high-throughput screening; immunology; model organisms
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34430908 PMCID: PMC8365513 DOI: 10.1016/j.xpro.2021.100732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: STAR Protoc ISSN: 2666-1667
Figure 1Overview of the genotype-phenotype screening procedure and hit validation steps
(A) Generation of inducible immortalized dendritic cells (iniDC) that stably express the CRISPR-CAS9 nuclease.
(B) CRISPR RNA (crRNA) library screening for the identification of genes involved in the iniDC functions.
(C) Generation of gene-edited iniDC clones and validation of DC function alteration.
(D) Principle of DC immunotherapy based on in vitro differentiated iniDC (de-iniDC).
Figure 2Scheme of synthetic CRISPR RNA (crRNA) transfection in 96-well plate format
A typical gRNA library plate containing 80 synthetic crRNAs of interest (as described in Steps 5 to 9) is employed for screening. It is suggested to use 8 wells of non-targeting control gRNA #1 for screening one plate to obtain a sufficient number of unmodified cells as controls. Key steps include 1) preparation of the trans-activating CRISPR RNA (tracrRNA) and distribution into a 96-well plate at 100 μL/well to be complemented with equal quantities of specific gRNAs or non-targeting control gRNA; 2) preparation of DharmaFECT #1 transfection reagent; 3) addition of 100 μL/well transfection reagent to the tracrRNA/gRNA complexes, followed by incubation to obtain transfection-ready solutions; 4) transfer of 200 μL transfection mix to 1×106 iniDC CSA9 cells.
Figure 3Validation of Fpr1 or Clec4a2 KO
(A) Detection of Fpr1 expression in Fpr1 KO clones by immunoblot; β-actin was used as loading control.
(B) Schematic diagrams of the target sequence of gRNA in the Clec4a2 gene and representative sequence electropherogram for the validation of target region deletion.
Antibody staining panel for flowcytometric analysis on the BD LSR Fortessa cytometer with appropriate compensation setup
| Laser | Excitation (nm) | Emission Filter (nm) | Target label | Dilution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UV | 355 | 450/50 | Zombie UV | 1/500 |
| Violet | 405 | 450/40 | CD40 eFluor450 | 1/100 |
| Blue | 488 | 530/30 | MHC-II FITC | 1/200 |
| 695/40 | CD80 PerCP-Cy5.5 | 1/200 | ||
| Yellow-Green | 561 | 710/50 | CD69 PE-Cy5 | 1/100 |
| LP750 | CD83 PE-Cy7 | 1/100 | ||
| Red | 633 | 670/14 | CD11C APC | 1/100 |
| 780/60 | CD86 APC-Cy7 | 1/100 |
The gating strategy is exemplified in Figure 4.
Figure 4Gating strategy for the flow cytometric analysis of DC surface markers
Cells were first gated in FSC and SSC, followed by gating on live cells (Zombie UV-) and exclusion of doublets. Live CD11C+ DCs were selected to generate histograms of the indicated activation and costimulatory markers.
Key information for the customized ELISA
| Target | Sample dilution | Top standard concentration | Capture antibody | Detection antibody | Avidin-HRP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL-1β | 1:1 | 2,000 pg/mL | 1:500 | 1:500 | 1:1,000 |
| IL-2 | 1:5 | 125 pg/mL | 1:500 | 1:500 | 1:1,000 |
| IL-6 | 1:50–100 | 500 pg/mL | 1:500 | 1:500 | 1:1,000 |
| IL-12(p70) | 1:1 | 500 pg/mL | 1:100 | 1:1,000 | 1:1,000 |
| TGFβ | 1:5 | 500 pg/mL | 1:500 | 1:500 | 1:1,000 |
| TNFα | 1:5 | 4,000 pg/mL | 1:200 | 1:1,000 | 1:1,000 |
Under certain treatment conditions, the production of IL-2 by B3Z (in case of co-culture with SL10 charged DCs) can be very abundant, thus the dilution factors of those samples may need to be adapted. For example, IL-2 sample can be diluted at 1/25–1/50.
Figure 5Typical plate design for the in vitro antigen cross-presentation assay including necessary control wells
De-iniDCs are seeded in 96-well plates at 5×104 cells/well in 100 μL DF medium, while ovalbumin (OVA) and OVA257-264 (SIINFEKL, SL8) peptide are prepared at 2× concentration for the exemplified plate layout (as described in Step 19). Wells for the ELISA standard curve should be reserved.
Figure 6Characterization of the CAS9-expressing inducible immortalized dendritic cells (iniDC CAS9)
(A) Validation of CAS9 expression in iniDC CAS9 clones by immunoblot.
(B) Hmgb1 expression in iniDC CAS9 cells that were transfected with crRNA targeting murine Hmgb1 gene (two gRNA sequence labeled as H1 and H2), or the non-target control gRNA (NT). Different transfection conditions (0.25 or 0.5×106 cells/well in 12-well plate, 1 or 2×106 cells/well in 6-well plate) were tested.
(C–M) Maturation and activation of DCs. BMDC, de-iniDC and de-iniDC CAS9 were treated with LPS or recombinant TNFα for 16 h. Supernatants were collected for ELISA quantification and cytokine release is reported as bar charts (C–G). Cells were subjected to antibody staining of surface markers and analyzed by flow cytometry. Representative histograms indicating the increase in the expression of surface marker and normalized median fluorescence intensity (MFI) are shown in (H–M).
Comparison of IL-2 production (N) as a proxy of OVA antigen cross-presentation to B3Z hybridoma by DCs was evaluated as schematically depicted in (O). Nonantigen loaded- and SIINFEKL peptide (SL8)-incubated DCs were used as negative and positive controls, respectively. Bar charts express means ± SD of triplicate assessments, ND, nondetectable. Statistical differences were calculated by means of an ANOVA test (Dunnett's multiple comparisons test), with ∗p < 0.05, ∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗∗p < 0.001 as compared to the untreated condition (UT).
Figure 7Activation of the CAS9 expressing-inducible immortalized dendritic cells (iniDC CAS9) in response to synergistic tumor cells
(A and B) In vitro phagocytosis of untreated (UT) or crizotinib-treated (CRIZO) MCA205 cells by bone marrow-derived DC (BMDC), as well as iniDC and iniDC CAS9 that were differentiated for 4 days into de-iniDC and de-iniDC CAS9, respectively. MCA205 cells were pre-stained with CellTracker blue. Representative dot plots (A) and the percentage of CellTracker+/CD11C+ cells (B) are reported.
(C–M) BMDC, de-iniDC and de-iniDC CAS9 were treated with the lysate of MCA205 cells for 16 h. Supernatant was collected for cytokine quantification by ELISA (C-G), while cells were subjected to an immunostaining of surface markers and analyzed by flow cytometry (H–M). Cytokine concentration in cell culture supernatants and median fluorescence intensity (MFI) of DC surface markers are reported as bar charts (means ± SD of triplicates). Statistical differences were calculated by means of ANOVA test (Dunnett's multiple comparisons test), with ∗p < 0.05, ∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗∗p < 0.001 as compared to the untreated condition (UT). Representative histograms of flowcytometric analysis are shown in (H). Differentiated iniDC and iniDC CAS9 cells (de-iniDC) were pulsed with tumor cell lysates and intratumorally (i.t.) injected into subcutaneous MCA205 tumors grafted on immunocompetent mice to test their immunotherapeutic potential.
Tumor growth curves are reported in (N) as mean ± SEM (n = 6). Statistical significance was calculated by means of the ANOVA Type 2 (Wald test) and significant results are indicated as ∗∗∗p<0.001 as compared with the PBS injection group.
Figure 8Screen for genes that modulate dendritic cell phenotype and function
CAS9 expressing-inducible immortalized dendritic cells (iniDC CAS9) were transfected with specific CRISPR RNAs (crRNA) to perform gene knockouts. Dexamethasone and doxycycline (DEX/DOX) were removed from the culture system during transfection and recovery of cells to differentiate iniDC CAS9 cells into primary de-iniDC CAS9 which were then used for assessing the phagocytosis of dying cancer cells (Phago), quantification of IL-1β, IL-6, and TNFα production upon stimulation with LPS, as well as the assessment of antigen cross-presentation capacity upon ovalbumin (OVA) treatment by interleukin-2 (IL-2) quantification in B3Z hybridoma co-culture supernatants. For each parameter, the readouts of crRNA-transfected wells were normalized to non-target control crRNA. Averaged ratios are summarized as a heatmap (A), in which Fpr1 is highlighted as a candidate gene whose KO leads to a loss of function phenotype in DC. Fpr1 KO de-iniDC CAS9 cells (Fpr1−/−) were analyzed for cytokine production (B–D) upon stimulation with LPS or MCA205 cells lysate, cross-presentation of OVA antigen or SINFKEL peptide (SL8) (E), and phagocytosis of MCA205 cells that were either untreated (UT) or crizotinib (CRIZO)-treated (F) Cytokine concentration and phagocytic events (CD11C+ CellTracker+ cells) are reported as bar charts (means ± SD of triplicates). Statistical differences were calculated by means of the ANOVA test (Dunnett's multiple comparisons test), with ∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗∗p < 0.001 as compared to UT, ###p<0.001 or $$$p<0.001 as compared between Fpr1−/− and wild type (wt) de-iniDC CAS9 cells with the same stimuli. Differentiated iniDC and iniDC CAS9 cells (de-iniDC) were pulsed with tumor cell lysate and intratumorally (i.t.) injected into subcutaneous MCA205 tumors grafted on immunocompetent mice to test their (immuno)therapeutic potential. Tumor growth curves are reported in (G) as mean ± SEM (n = 6). Statistical significance was calculated by means of the ANOVA Type 2 (Wald test) and significant results are indicated as ∗P<0.05 compared to the PBS group.
Figure 9Screen for genes that modulate in vitro antigen cross-presentation by DC
CAS9 expressing-inducible immortalized dendritic cells (iniDC CAS9) were transfected with specific CRISPR RNAs (crRNA) to perform gene knockout during differentiation into de-iniDC CAS9. Gene edited de-iniDC CAS9 were incubated with ovalbumin (OVA) and cocultured with B3Z hybridoma cells to quantify interleukin-2 (IL-2) secretion as an indicator for antigen cross-presentation capacity. A violin plot is used to depict the IL-2 concentrations (mean value of duplicates) (A). The nonantigen loaded- and SIINFEKL peptide (SL8) loaded-DCs were used as negative and positive controls, respectively. Candidate gene whose KO leads to defective (blue color) or increased (red color) antigen cross-presentation are highlighted. De-iniDC CAS9 cells that are KO for Clec4a2 (Clec4a2−/−) were tested for cross-presentation of OVA antigen or the SINFKEL peptide (SL8) (B), and phagocytosis of MCA205 cells that were untreated (UT) or crizotinib (CRIZO)-treated (C). Cytokine concentration and phagocytic events (CD11C+ CellTracker+ cells) are reported as bar charts (means ± SD of triplicates). Statistical differences were calculated by means of the ANOVA test (Dunnett's multiple comparisons test), with ∗∗∗p < 0.001 as compared to UT, ###p<0.001 or $$$p<0.001 as compared between Fpr1−/− and wild type (wt) de-iniDC CAS9 cells with the same stimuli. Differentiated iniDC and iniDC CAS9 cells (de-iniDC) were pulsed with tumor cell lysates and intratumorally (i.t.) injected into subcutaneous MCA205 tumors grafted on immunocompetent mice to test their immunotherapeutic potential. Tumor growth curves are reported in (D) as mean ± SEM (n = 6). Statistical significance was calculated by means of the ANOVA Type 2 (Wald test) and significant results are indicated as ∗p<0.05 and ∗∗∗p<0.001 compared to the PBS injection group.
| REAGENT or RESOURCE | SOURCE | IDENTIFIER |
|---|---|---|
| CRISPR CAS9 (1/2,000 for immunoblot) | Cell Signaling Technology | Cat# 14697 |
| β-Actin HRP (1/20,000 for immunoblot) | Abcam | Cat# ab49900 |
| HMGB1 (1/2,000 for immunoblot) | Abcam | Cat# ab18256 |
| FPR1 (1/500 for immunoblot) | Invitrogen | Cat# PA1-41398 |
| CD16/32 (1/1000 for blocking) | BioLegend | Cat# 101302 |
| CD40 eFluor 450 (1/100 for flow cytometry) | eBioscience | Cat# 48-0402-82 |
| CD11c APC (1/100 for flow cytometry) | BioLegend | Cat# 117310 |
| MHC-II FITC (1/200 for flow cytometry) | BioLegend | Cat# 107606 |
| CD80 PerCP-Cy5.5 (1/200 for flow cytometry) | BioLegend | Cat# 104722 |
| CD69 E-Cy5 (1/100 for flow cytometry) | eBioscience | Cat# 15-0691-82 |
| CD83 PE-Cy7 (1/100 for flow cytometry) | eBioscience | Cat# 25-0839-42 |
| CD86 APC-Fire750 (1/100 for flow cytometry) | BioLegend | Cat# 105046 |
| IL-1β (1/500 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 503502 |
| IL-1β biotin (1/500 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 515801 |
| IL-2 (1/500 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 503702 |
| IL-2 biotin (1/500 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 503804 |
| IL-6 (1/500 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 504502 |
| IL-6 biotin (1/500 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 504602 |
| IL-12 (p70) (1/100 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 511802 |
| IL-12 (p40) biotin (1/1,000 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 505302 |
| TNFα (1/200 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 506102 |
| TNFα biotin (1/1,000 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 516003 |
| TGFβ (1/500 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 361202 |
| TGFβ biotin (1/500 for ELISA) | BioLegend | Cat# 141412 |
| Edit-R Lentiviral CAG-Blast-Cas9 Nuclease Particles | Horizon Discovery | Cat# VCAS10129 |
| Bovine serum albumin (BSA) | EUROMEDEX | Cat# 04-100-812-E |
| Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA), Low Endotoxin & IgG, Protease | US Biological | Cat# A1315 |
| 2-Mercaptoethanol | Sigma | Cat# M3148 |
| Recombinant Murine GM-CSF | PeproTech | Cat# 315-03 |
| Dexamethasone | Sigma | Cat# D0700000 |
| Doxycycline hyclate | Sigma | Cat# D3000000 |
| Blasticidin | InvivoGen | Cat# ant-bl-1 |
| CellTracker™ Blue CMAC dye | Invitrogen | Cat# C2110 |
| Crizotinib | Sigma | Cat# PZ0191 |
| Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs) | Sigma | Cat# L2654 |
| Recombinant murine TNFα | BioLegend | Cat# 575206 |
| Albumin from chicken egg white | Sigma | Cat# A5503 |
| OVA peptide 257–264 (SIINFEKL, SL8) | GenScript | Cat# RP10611 |
| Recombinant murine IL-1β | BioLegend | Cat# 575109 |
| Recombinant murine IL-2 | BioLegend | Cat# 575409 |
| Recombinant murine IL-6 | BioLegend | Cat# 575709 |
| Recombinant murine IL-12(p70) | BioLegend | Cat# 577009 |
| Recombinant murine TGFβ | BioLegend | Cat# 594509 |
| Zombie UV™ Fixable Viability Kit | BioLegend | Cat# 423108 |
| Inducible immortalized murine dendritic cell line (iniDC) | ( | N/A |
| B3Z T cell line | ( | RRID: CVCL 6277 |
| MCA205 Mouse Fibrosarcoma Cell Line | Sigma | Cat# SCC173 RRID: CVCL VR90 |
| Mouse C57BL/6JOlaHsd (six- to ten-week-old females) | ENVIGO France | 5704F |
| Predesigned synthetic guide RNAs (crRNA) | Please see | N/A |
| Edit-R synthetic crRNA non-targeting control#1 | Horizon Discovery | Cat# U-007501-01-2 |
| trans-activating CRISPR RNA (tracrRNA) | Horizon Discovery | Cat# U-002005-5000 |
| Microsoft office Excel | Microsoft | |
| FlowJo | FlowJo LLC | |
| Graphpad Prism | GraphPad Software | |
| TumGrowth | ( | |
| RPMI 1640 medium, GlutaMAX™ | Gibco | CAT# 61870010 |
| DMEM, high glucose, GlutaMAX™ | Gibco | CAT# 10566016 |
| HEPES (1 M) | Gibco | CAT# 15630056 |
| Sodium Pyruvate (100 mM) | Gibco | CAT# 11360070 |
| Penicillin-Streptomycin (Pen/Strep, 10,000 U/mL) | Gibco | CAT# 15140122 |
| Fetal Bovine Serum (FBS) | Sigma | CAT# F7524 |
| Phosphate-Buffered Saline (PBS) | Gibco | CAT# 20012027 |
| TrypLE™ Express | Gibco | CAT# 12604013 |
| Trypan Blue solution, 0.4%, liquid | Sigma | CAT# T8154 |
| DAPI Solution (1 mg/mL) | Life Technologies | CAT# 62248 |
| RNase AWAY™ surface decontaminant | Molecular BioProducts | CAT# 7002 |
| DharmaFECT 1 transfection reagent | Horizon Discovery | CAT# T-2001-04 |
| 10 mM Tris-HCl Buffer pH 7.4 | Horizon Discovery | CAT# B-006000-100 |
| NuPAGE® LDS Sample Buffer (4×) | Life Technologies | CAT# NP0008 |
| NuPAGE® Sample Reducing Agent (10×) | Life Technologies | CAT# NP0009 |
| Pierce Protease& Phosphatase Inhibitor Tablets | Life Technologies | CAT# A32961 |
| RIPA Extraction and Lysis Buffer | Life Technologies | CAT# 89901 |
| 10× TBS buffer | EUROMEDEX | CAT# ET220-B |
| Tween® 20 | Sigma | CAT# P1379 |
| ELISA Coating Buffer (5×) | BioLegend | CAT# 421701 |
| HRP-Avidin | BioLegend | CAT# 405103 |
| 1-Step™ Ultra TMB-ELISA Substrate Solution | Life Technologies | CAT# 34028 |
| Sulfuric acid | Sigma | CAT# 258105-1L-PC |
| Titramax 100R shaker | Heidolph | CAT# 544–11200-00 |
Preparation of stock reagents/solutions
| Reagent | Final concentration | Preparation |
|---|---|---|
| Predesigned synthetic guide RNAs (crRNA) | 10 μM | Briefly centrifuge tubes or plates containing the RNAs to ensure that the RNA is located at the bottom of the tubes or wells. Resuspend in 10 mM Tris pH 7.4 to obtain a 10 μM stock concentration with appropriate volumes, e.g., for 10 nmol of crRNA, add 1 mL of 10 mM Tris pH 7.4. Securely seal plates or tubes and solubilize on a plate shaker at maximum speed for 30 min at room temperature. In case of large volumes of RNA solution, especially regarding the tracrRNA, aliquot to smaller quantities. All RNA solutions should be stored at −80°C and not subjected to multiple freeze-thaw cycles. |
| Trans-activating CRISPR RNA (tracrRNA) | ||
| Edit-R synthetic crRNA non-targeting control#1 | ||
| Decomplemented FBS | N/A | Thaw the frozen FBS in a 37°C water bath and decomplement by heating at 56°C for 30 min. Store at 4°C for a up to one month. |
| β-mercaptoethanol | 50 mM (1,000×) | Dilute 200 μL β-mercaptoethanol (14.3 M) with 56.8 mL PBS and pass through a 0.22 μm filter. Store at 4°C for up to 6 months |
| Recombinant murine GM-CSF | 50 μg/mL | Reconstitute the lyophilized powder at 50 μg/mL in 0.1% BSA (Low-Endotoxin)/PBS in a sterile environment, aliquot and store at −80°C. Stable for more than one year, avoid freeze-thaw cycles, store at 4°C for a maximum of 14 days. |
| Dexamethasone | 25 mM | Reconstitute at 25 mM in ethanol, stable at −20°C for more than a year. |
| Doxycycline | 25 mg/mL | Reconstitute at 25 mg/mL in water, stable at −20°C for more than a year. |
| CellTracker™ Blue CMAC Dye | 10 mM | Reconstitute the 5 mg powder with 2.39 mL DMSO in a sterile environment, aliquot to smaller volume and store at −20°C for up to 2 years. |
| Crizotinib | 10 mM | Reconstitute the 5 mg powder with 1.1 mL DMSO in a sterile environment, aliquot and store at −20°C for up to 1 year. |
| LPS | 1 mg/mL | Reconstitute lyophilized LPS with sterile Milli-Q water in a sterile environment, aliquot store at −20°C for up to 1 year. |
| Recombinant murine TNFα | 50 μg/mL | Recombinant murine TNFα from Biolegend is bottled at lot-specific concentrations is diluted at 50 μg/mL with 0.1% BSA (Low-Endotoxin)/PBS, aliquoted and stored at −80°C. Stable for more than one year, avoid freeze-thaw cycles. |
| Ovalbumin (OVA) | 100 mg/mL | Reconstitute the powder with DC medium, pass through a 0.22 μm filter, and aliquot and store at −20°C for up to 1 year. |
| OVA peptide (SL8) | 100 mg/mL | Reconstitute the powder at 1 mg/mL stock concentration with PBS, pass through a 0.22 μm filter, aliquot and store at −80°C for up to 1 year. Once thawed, dilute to 1 μg/mL with RPMI 1640 medium and store at −80°C for up to 3 months. |
| FACS buffer (1% BSA) | 1 mg/mL | PBS containing 1% (w/v) BSA. Dissolve 5 g of BSA powder in 500 mL of PBS, pass through a 0.22 μm filter and store at 4°C for up to 1 month. |
| ELISA coating buffer (1×) | N/A | For each 96-well plate, dilute 2 mL of 5× concentrated coating buffer with 8 mL ddH2O and use the diluted buffer within 48 h, or pass through a 0.22 μm filter and store at 4°C for maximum 3 months. |
| ELISA washing buffer | N/A | ELISA washing buffer is 1× TBS containing 0.05% Tween 20 (v/v). Store at room temperature for a maximum of one month |
| ELISA diluent | N/A | ELISA diluent is PBS with 1% (w/v) BSA and 5% FBS (v/v). Dissolve 5 g of BSA powder in 500 mL of PBS, gently shake to dissolve the powder completely, then add 50 mL FBS, mix, and pass through a 0.22 μm filter. The sterile diluent can be stored at 4°C for up to 1 month. |
| ELISA stopping buffer (2 M sulfuric acid) | 2 M | Prepare 845 mL ddH2O in a 1 L glass bottle, then use a 25 mL serological pipette to slowly add 100 mL pure sulfuric acid (18.9 M), do not mix the solution but let the bottle at room temperature for about 2 h. Gently mix and store at room temperature, for up to 6 months. |
Basic DC culture medium (BC medium)
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| RPMI 1640 medium | 1× | 500 mL |
| Decomplemented FBS | 10% | 57 mL |
| Sodium pyruvate (100 mM) | 1 mM | 5.7 mL |
| HEPES (1M) | 10 mM | 5.7 mL |
| Pen/Strep, 10,000 U/mL | 100 U/mL: | 5.7 mL |
Store at 4°C for up to 4 weeks
Antibiotics-free basic DC culture medium (AF-BC medium)
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| RPMI 1640 medium | 1× | 500 mL |
| Decomplemented FBS | 10% | 57 mL |
| Sodium pyruvate (100 mM) | 1 mM | 5.7 mL |
| HEPES (1M) | 10 mM | 5.7 mL |
Store at 4°C for up to 4 weeks
Dex/Dox (1000×)
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Dexamethasone (25 mM) | 100 μM | 40 μL |
| Doxycycline (25 mg/mL) | 1 mg/mL | 400 μL |
| PBS | 1× | 9.56 mL |
Store at 4°C for a maximum of 3 months
DC complete growth medium (CG medium)
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| BC medium | 1× | 50 mL |
| β-Mercaptoethanol (50 mM) | 50 μM | 50 μL |
| recombinant GM-CSF (50 μg/mL) | 10 ng/mL | 10 μL |
| DEX/DOX (1000×) | 100 nM DEX & 1 μg/mL DOX | 50 μL |
Use within 24 h
DC differentiating medium (DF medium)
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| BC | 1× | 50 mL |
| β-Mercaptoethanol (50 mM) | 50 μM | 50 μL |
| Recombinant GM-CSF (50 μg/mL) | 20 ng/mL | 20 μL |
Use within 24 h
DC transduction & transfection medium (TT medium)
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| AF-BC medium | 1× | 50 mL |
| β-Mercaptoethanol (50 mM) | 50 μM | 50 μL |
| DEX/DOX (1000×) | 100 nM DEX & 1 μg/mL DOX | 50 μL |
| Recombinant GM-CSF (50 μg/mL) | 10 ng/mL | 10 μL |
Use within 24 h
DC transduction & transfection and differentiation medium (TT-DF medium)
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| AF-BC medium | 1× | 50 mL |
| β-Mercaptoethanol (50 mM) | 50 μM | 50 μL |
| Recombinant GM-CSF (50 μg/mL) | 20 ng/mL | 20 μL |
Use within 24 h
DMEM based culture medium (D-BC medium)
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| DMEM medium | 1× | 500 mL |
| Decomplemented FBS | 10% | 50 mL |
| Pen/Strep, 10,000 U/mL | 100 U/mL: | 5.5 mL |
Store at 4°C for up to 4 weeks
Rapid western blotting protein preparation buffer
| Reagent | Final concentration | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| 4× LDS sample buffer | 2× | 5 mL |
| 10× sample reducing agent | 1× | 1 mL |
| RIPA buffer | 1× | 4 mL |
| Protease & phosphatase inhibitors | 1× | 1 tablet |
The homogenized buffer can be aliquoted and stored at −20°C for up to 6 months