B16F10 In Vitro Cell Exclusion Zone Assay (Migration)

CAT#: ITS-1022-YF30
Target Cell Organism: Mouse
Target Cell Alternative Name: B16-F10
Target Cell Name: B16F10
Assay Type: Cell Migration and Invasion Assays
Assay Overview
This assay is to provide B16F10-based In Vitro Cell Exclusion Zone Assay (Migration) to accelerate our client's oncology projects. The assay will be customized according to the specific requirements. Please contact our scientists to discuss more details.
Target Cell Name
B16F10
Target Cell Organism
Mouse
Target Cell Background
B16F10 cell line (from Mus musculus C57BL/6J strain) is a convenient and widely used experimental model of highly metastatic melanoma to study cytotoxicity, migration, metastatic spread and tissue invasion. B16-F10 is a cell line exhibiting a morphology of spindle-shaped and epithelial-like cells that was isolated from skin tissue of a mouse with melanoma. Use these cells in your skin cancer research.
Target Cell Alternative Name
B16-F10
Related Diseases
Melanoma
Research Area
Oncology
Assay Name
In Vitro Cell Exclusion Zone Assay (Migration)
Short Description
B16F10-cell based In Vitro Cell Exclusion Zone Assay (Migration)
Assay Description
For the cell exclusion assay, before seeding of cells in well plates, silicon stoppers (for 96- or 384-well formats) are placed inside the wells to create a cell free zone. Once cells attain confluency, stoppers are removed, allowing cells to cover the exclusion zone. Unlike in the normal scratch assay, sharp and uniform borders can be created with the stoppers. When placing a stopper inside wells, stopper must be firmly attached to the bottom of the well plate to prevent movement of cells beneath the stopper. Cells moving towards the exclusion area can be monitored using light or fluorescence microscopy.
Assay Type
Cell Migration and Invasion Assays
Assay Type Details
The movement of cancer cells and formation of tumors in neighboring tissue is a sequential cascade known as invasion-metastatic cascade, which includes cancer cell invasion through extracellular matrix (ECM), intravasation into blood and colonization at sites after they exit from blood circulation. Migration and invasion are two different processes where, cell migration involves movement of cells without passing through a barrier such as ECM, whereas cell invasion involves passing through a barrier such as ECM while destroying it.
Assay Subtype
Cell Migration Assay
Assay MOA
Cell Migration Assay
For Research Use Only | Not For Clinical Use
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