Abstract

Contamination of primary and cell cultures by mycoplasmas is one of the main economic and biological pitfalls in basic research, diagnosis and manufacture of biotechnological products. It is a common issue which may be difficult to conduct surveillance on. Mycoplasma presence may affect several physiological parameters of the cell, besides being considered an important source of inaccurate and/or non-reproducible scientific results. Each cell type presents characteristical symptoms, mainly morphological, that indicate a contamination by mycoplasma. HEp-2 cells originate from carcinoma of the larynx and are, therefore, part of the respiratory tract, which is one of mycoplasma habitats. Despite the importance these cells in several biological research (evaluation of cell proliferation and migration, apoptosis, antiviral and antitumor compounds), the alterations induced by mycoplasma contamination in HEp-2 cells have not yet been described. Here, we describe the progressive morphological alterations in culture of HEp-2 cells infected with mycoplasma, as well as the-diagnosis of the infection and its treatment. Mycoplasma contamination described within this work led to cytoplasm elongation, cell-to-cell spacing, thin plasma membrane projections, cytoplasmic vacuoles, fusion with neighboring cells, and, finally, cell death. Contamination was detected by fluorescence imaging (DAPI) and PCR reactions. The cultures were treated with BM-Cyclin antibiotic to eliminate contamination. The data presented here will be of relevance to researchers whose investigations involve cell culture, especially respiratory and HEp-2 cells.

Highlights

  • The employment of cell line culture in biological research has been an important tool for over 100 years, due to some peculiar features of these cells

  • The identification of mycoplasma contamination may be hampered by the fact that this microorganism does not alter the turbidity of culture medium, even though the physiology, morphology and gene expression of the cell is altered to a great extent

  • HEp-2 cells have their origin in the tissues of the respiratory tract, what may predispose their contamination towards mycoplasma species

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Summary

Introduction

The employment of cell line culture in biological research has been an important tool for over 100 years, due to some peculiar features of these cells. They can proliferate endlessly and maintain their original tissue-characteristic, as long as some manipulation conditions are present. The mycoplasmas, firstly isolated in 1956 (Robinson et al, 1956), are the smallest free-living bacteria, with diameters of 300-800 nm. These pleomorphic microorganisms have no cell wall. There may be several sources of mycoplasma contamination, including the researchers themselves, since the respiratory and urogenital mucosa are the most frequent mycoplasma habitats (Phelan, 2007)

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