BioTechniques (Jan 1996)

Gene Transfer into Subcultured Endometrial Cells Using Lipofection

  • I. Lascombe,
  • P. Mougin,
  • C. Vuillermoz,
  • G.L. Adessi,
  • M. Jouvenot

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2144/96201st03
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 88 – 91

Abstract

Read online

Lipofection using the Lipofectin® reagent was optimized to transiently transfect subcultured guinea pig endometrial stromal cells with a β-galactosidase gene driven by a simian virus 40 promoter. Efficient transfection was obtained in the following conditions: a value of six for the ratio of lipofectin to DNA, a low cellular density (105 cells per 35-mm well) at the time of subculture (48 h before lipofection) and a lipofection duration of 12 hours. Lipofection was compared to calcium phosphate precipitation previously optimized in the same culture model. At a low cellular density, the lipofection method was found to be more efficient than the calcium phosphate precipitation. This result gives a great relevance to lipofection since the cultured cells available in an experiment are often limited. Then, using cells at low density and a plasmid containing the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (cat) gene linked to an estrogen response element, it was shown that the lipofection procedure is a suitable tool for the evaluation of gene regulation by estrogen.