Obtaining Suspensions of Animal Cells in Metaphase from Cultures Propagated on Glass

Abstract
Cells of some strains continuously cultivated in vitro have a pronounced tendency to lose their attachment to glass during mitosis. If division of these cells is arrested in meta-phase by treatment with colchicine, many of the cells are set free and float into the medium. Advantage has been taken of this property to collect large numbers of suspended cells in c-metaphase. By applying standard procedures of staining with orcein and manual squashing to these cells, preparations are obtained that are useful for critical chromosome analysis. The procedure consists in treatment of cultures with colchicine (final concentration 0.1 μg/ml) for 18-24 hr; agitation in hypotonic medium (quarter-strength Tyrode's or CMRL-1066) for 5 min; addition of 1:3 acetic-alcohol for 5-10 min; removal and centrifugation of the resulting fluid mixture from the culture; and resuspension of the sedimented cells in a small volume of the fluid. Advantages of the method are: large numbers of metaphase plates can be examined on a single slide, the chromosomes are contracted and well separated, and cytoplasmic boundaries are preserved.
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