HepG2 In Vitro Spheroid Migration Assay (Migration)

CAT#: ITS-1022-YF1186
Target Cell Organism: Human
Target Cell Alternative Name: Hep G2
Target Cell Name: HepG2
Assay Type: Cell Migration and Invasion Assays
Assay Overview
This assay is to provide HepG2-based In Vitro Spheroid Migration 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
HepG2
Target Cell Organism
Human
Target Cell Background
Hep G2 is an immortal cell line which was derived in 1975 from the liver tissue of a 15-year-old Caucasian male from Argentina with a well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma. These cells are epithelial in morphology, have a modal chromosome number of 55, and are not tumorigenic in nude mice.
Target Cell Alternative Name
Hep G2
Related Diseases
Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Research Area
Oncology
Assay Name
In Vitro Spheroid Migration Assay (Migration)
Short Description
HepG2-cell based In Vitro Spheroid Migration Assay (Migration)
Assay Description
Cell spheroids are attached to a surface of cell culture wells or dishes and are allowed to migrate to another region of the wells where cells start to attach and form a new monolayer. This assay resembles 2D and 3D culturing technique and mimics an in vivo system. Cells that form spheroids can only be used for this assay and inclusion of two different types of cells (co- cultivation) to monitor invasion is possible with this assay. Fluorescence and light microscopy can be used to monitor invasion of cells.
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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