Abstract

BackgroundGene transfer by electroporation is an established method for the non-viral mediated transfection of mammalian cells. Primary cells pose a particular challenge for electroporation-mediated gene transfer, since they are more vulnerable than immortalized cells, and have a limited proliferative capacity. Improving the gene transfer by using square wave electroporation in difficult to transfect cells, like bovine fetal fibroblasts, is a prerequisite for transgenic and further downstream experiments.ResultsHere, bovine fetal fibroblasts were used for square-wave electroporation experiments in which the following parameters were systematically tested: electroporation buffer, electroporation temperature, pulse voltage, pulse duration, pulse number, cuvette type and plasmid DNA amount. For the experiments a commercially available square-wave generator was applied. Post electroporation, the bovine fetal fibroblasts were observed after 24 h for viability and reporter expression. The best results were obtained with a single 10 millisecond square-wave pulse of 400 V using 10 μg supercoiled plasmid DNA and 0.3 × 106 cells in 100 μl of Opti-MEM medium in 4 mm cuvettes. Importantly, the electroporation at room temperature was considerably better than with pre-cooled conditions.ConclusionsThe optimized electroporation conditions will be relevant for gene transfer experiments in bovine fetal fibroblasts to obtain genetically engineered donor cells for somatic cell nuclear transfer and for reprogramming experiments in this species.

Highlights

  • Gene transfer by electroporation is an established method for the non-viral mediated transfection of mammalian cells

  • Few data are available describing the optimization of electroporation conditions for bovine fetal fibroblasts (BFFs)

  • The recently developed designer nuclease (ZNF, Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALEN) and Crispr/Cas9) were employed to edit endogenous genes or knock-in genes-of-interest into bovine primary cells, which are subsequently used in animal cloning via somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) [15,16,17,18,19]

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Summary

Introduction

Gene transfer by electroporation is an established method for the non-viral mediated transfection of mammalian cells. The establishment of somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) [12] allowed the generation of transgenic and knock-out cattle via the use of genetically modified fibroblast donor cells [13, 14]. The recently developed designer nuclease (ZNF, TALEN and Crispr/Cas9) were employed to edit endogenous genes or knock-in genes-of-interest into bovine primary cells, which are subsequently used in animal cloning via SCNT [15,16,17,18,19]. These examples highlight the importance of efficient transfection methods for bovine primary cells

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