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Gel Microdrop Technology For
Rapid Isolation of Rare and High Producer Cells
Nature Medicine, May 1997,
vol.3 #5, pp.583-585
James C. Weaver, Patricia
McGrath, and Sharlene Adams
Increasing use of monoclonal antibodies and
recombinant proteins has created a demand for methods that accelerate and simplify
generation of stable cell lines. Mammalian cell-line development involves isolation or
engineering of protein-secreting cells and screening for specificity and high
productivity. Heterogeneous populations of fused or transfected cells are repeatedly
assayed to confirm and quantify secretion of a desired protein, such as immunoglobulin.
Traditional methods require distribution of individual cells into microtiter wells and
analysis of supernatants for the secreted product by ELISA assays. The effort required to
plate cells, to obtain detectable levels of secretion, assay supernatants and to recover
positive clones is labor-intensive and slow; the entire process can take weeks to months.
Producer cells are frequently overgrown by nonsecreting fast growers, making recovery
nearly impossible. Clonal instability often wreaks havoc with product development
timelines when isolated cells do not withstand the rigors of large-scale manufacturing.
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