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HCT 116

SIRPA Knockout cell line (HCT 116)

Catalog Number: KO09973

Price: Online Inquiry

Specifications KO Solutions KO Cell Line Workflow Handling procedures Downloads Related products

Specifications

Product Information
Product Name SIRPA Knockout cell line (HCT 116)
specification 1*10^6
Storage and transportation Dry ice preservation/T25 live cell transportation.
Cell morphology Epithelioid, adherent cell
Passage ratio 1:2~1:4
species Human
Gene SIRPA
Gene ID 140885
Build method Electric rotation method / virus method
Mycoplasma testing Negative
Cultivation system 90%McCOYs 5A+10% FBS
Parental Cell Line HCT 116
Quality Control Genotype: SIRPA Knockout cell line (HCT 116) >95% viability before freezing. All cells were tested and found to be free of bacterial, viruses,mycoplasma and other toxins.
Gene Information
Gene Official Full Name signal regulatory protein alphaprovided by HGNC
Also known as BIT; MFR; P84; SIRP; MYD-1; SHPS1; CD172A; PTPNS1
Gene Description The protein encoded by this gene is a member of the signal-regulatory-protein (SIRP) family, and also belongs to the immunoglobulin superfamily. SIRP family members are receptor-type transmembrane glycoproteins known to be involved in the negative regulation of receptor tyrosine kinase-coupled signaling processes. This protein can be phosphorylated by tyrosine kinases. The phospho-tyrosine residues of this PTP have been shown to recruit SH2 domain containing tyrosine phosphatases (PTP), and serve as substrates of PTPs. This protein was found to participate in signal transduction mediated by various growth factor receptors. CD47 has been demonstrated to be a ligand for this receptor protein. This gene and its product share very high similarity with several other members of the SIRP family. These related genes are located in close proximity to each other on chromosome 20p13. Multiple alternatively spliced transcript variants have been determined for this gene. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008]
Expression Ubiquitous expression in brain (RPKM 71.2), appendix (RPKM 27.2) and 23 other tissues See more

KO Solutions

We develop gene knockout solutions tailored to customer requirements and the condition of the target gene.

  • Editing Tools

Cas9 Protein

Cas9 mRNA sgRNA

Cas9 Plasmid

Cas9 Virus

A – Exon KO

gRNAs are designed in the introns flanking the exon, targeting non-multiple-of-3 base deletions in the exon, resulting in frameshift mutations.

B - Frameshift KO

gRNAs are designed within the exon, creating non-multiple-of-3 base deletions to induce frameshift mutations.

C - Complete KO

The entire gene coding sequence is deleted, achieving large-scale knockout effects.

KO Cell Line Workflow

KO Strategy Design

CRISPR Plasmid/Lentiviral Vector Construction

Lentiviral Packaging

Cell Transfection/Lentiviral Infection

Drug Selection

Cell Cryopreservation

Quality Control

Sequencing Validation

Monoclonal Cell Line Generation

Pool Efficiency Validation

Handling procedures

Cell Thawing

  • Pre-warm complete culture medium in a 37°C water bath.
  • Thaw the cryovial in a 37°C water bath for 1–2 minutes.
  • Transfer the cryovial to a biosafety cabinet (BSC) and wipe the surface with 70% ethanol.
  • Loosen the cap and gently transfer the cell suspension into a sterile centrifuge tube containing 9 mL of complete medium.
  • Centrifuge at 125 × g for 5–7 min at room temperature (RT), then discard the supernatant.
  • Resuspend the cell pellet in 5 mL of complete medium and transfer the suspension into a T25 flask.
  • Incubate the cells at 37°C in a 5% CO₂ incubator.
  • Recommended subculturing ratio: 1:2 to 1:3, reaching confluency in 2–3 days.

Cell Passaging

  • When cell confluence reaches 80–90%, proceed with passaging.
  • Pre-warm complete medium, PBS, and trypsin (0.25% Trypsin-EDTA, Gibco 25200-056) in a 37°C water bath. Once near 37°C, spray the bottles with 75% ethanol and place them in the BSC.
  • Retrieve the culture flask from the incubator, spray with 75% ethanol, and transfer it to the BSC.
  • To avoid dislodging cells, gently rinse the monolayer with PBS along the upper wall of the flask. Discard the PBS after washing (use 2 mL for T25 flasks).
  • Add an appropriate volume of trypsin (1.5 mL for T75, 0.5 mL for T25) and gently tilt the flask to ensure full coverage. Adjust the volume as needed. After 1–2 min, when most cells detach, neutralize digestion by adding an equal volume of complete medium. Gently pipette with a 5 mL serological pipette to ensure complete detachment.
  • Transfer the cell suspension to a 15 mL centrifuge tube and spin at 300 × g for 5 min. Discard the supernatant.
  • Resuspend the pellet in 5 mL of complete medium, adjust the seeding ratio as required, and replenish the flask with fresh medium (13–15 mL for T75, 5 mL for T25). Add 1% penicillin-streptomycin (dual antibiotic).
  • Tighten the cap, gently swirl to mix, and place the flask in a 37°C, 5% CO₂ incubator.

Cell Cryopreservation

  • Prepare cryopreservation medium in advance and pre-chill.
  • Ensure cells meet freezing criteria: healthy morphology, late-log phase growth, and absence of contamination or senescence (verify under a microscope).
  • Digest and centrifuge the cells (refer to the passaging protocol).
  • Resuspend the cell pellet in cryopreservation medium (1 mL per vial), mix thoroughly, and aliquot into cryovials.
  • Place the vials in a freezing container and store at −80°C overnight.
  • For long-term storage, transfer the cryovials to a liquid nitrogen tank.

Downloads

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