Standardization of Human Diploid cell cultivation
Human embryonic diploid lung fibroblasts grown in Eagle's medium were exposed continually to a variety of environmental conditions over a large number of passages to observe how these conditions affected the growth and longevity of these cells in vitro. The cells grew well at temperatures between 34 and 37 C and some cells could be adapted to grow at 40 C. Very limited growth occurred at 30 to 31 C; however, confluent monolayers of cells could be maintained for months at 30 C and still give rise to actively growing cultures. Increasing the amino acid concentration in Eagle's medium or the calf serum concentration above 10% had no effect on the growth rate or longevity. One per cent calf serum could not support prolonged active growth. Trypsin concentrations between 1 and 0.1% and crystalline trypsin at 50 μg/ml showed no influence on cell growth. Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid treatment and scraping, however, destroyed many of the cells, and the survivors grew poorly. The clonal morphology varied with age. Young cells frequently gave rise to densely packed clones, whereas older cells gave rise to clones with widely scattered cells. The cloning efficiency was high when the cells were young but decreased rapidly with successive passage. It was relatively constant from the 7th to 20th passage at about 15%.