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Cat. No. ARG0110

RB1 Knockout A-549 Cell Line

  • Product Type:

    Genome-edited Cells

  • Tissue Source:

    Lung

  • Disease:

    Carcinoma

  • Gene Species:

    Homo sapiens (Human)

RB1 Knockout A-549 Cell Line is a human CRISPR/Cas9-edited lung alveolar epithelial adenocarcinoma model with disruption of the RB1 tumor suppressor gene. In A-549 cells, loss of pRB enables investigation of RB-E2F checkpoint failure, G1/S transition control, and proliferation-associated transcriptional programs involving E2F1, CCNE1, CDC6, and MCM2. Because RB1 is regulated by CDK4/6-Cyclin D and CDK2-Cyclin E signaling, this model is useful for lung cancer biology, senescence bypass, genome instability, and therapeutic response studies using assays such as western blotting, RNA-seq, flow cytometry, EdU/BrdU incorporation, and drug sensitivity profiling.

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Cryopreserved in vials and shipped on dry ice


Disclaimer:

For Research Use Only

  • Characteristics

    Host Cell

    A-549

    Morphology

    Epithelial-like

    Age

    58 years

    Sex of Donor

    Male

    Gene Name

    RB1

    Gene Species

    Homo sapiens (Human)

    Gene Identifier

    NCBI Gene ID 5925

  • Culture Conditions

    Temperature

    37°C

    Atmosphere

    5% CO₂

  • Quality Control

    Sterility testing

    Daily monitoring confirms that the cells are free from bacterial, yeast, and fungal contamination.

    Mycoplasma testing

    Negative for mycoplasma through PCR analysis

    Pathogens

    Cells tested negative for HIV-1, HBV, and HCV.

  • Disclaimer

    Intended Use

    This product is intended for laboratory in vitro use only. lt is not intended for diagnostic, therapeutic, or clinical applications.

    Disclaimer

    Ascent Research endeavors to provide accurate and up-to-date product information. However, no warranties or representations are made regarding its completeness or reliability. References to scientific literature and patents are for informational purposes only, and the customer assumes sole responsibility for verifying their accuracy.

    By accepting this product, the customer acknowledges and agrees to assume all risks associated with its receipt, handling, storage, disposal, and use, including compliance with all applicable safety and environmental regulations and precautions. Relevant laws, regulations, and ethical guidelines must be followed in conducting any research, modifications, or derivatives derived from this product.

    This product is provided "AS IS", and except as expressly stated herein, Ascent Research disclaims all other warranties, express or implied. Under no circumstances shall Ascent Research, its affiliates, or representatives be liable for indirect, incidental, consequential, or punitive damages arising from the use of this material. While Ascent Research employs rigorous quality control measures, we shall not be held responsible for damages resulting from misidentification or misinterpretation of the provided materials.

Description

The RB1 Knockout A-549 Cell Line is a human CRISPR/Cas9-engineered knockout model in which the RB1 gene has been disrupted to eliminate functional retinoblastoma protein (pRB) expression. This stable in vitro cell system is generated in the A-549 background, a human lung alveolar epithelial adenocarcinoma cell line, and is intended for mechanistic studies of tumor suppressor loss in pulmonary epithelial cancer cells. The model provides a defined platform for investigating RB1-dependent control of proliferation, transcriptional repression, and checkpoint regulation in a lung cancer-relevant cellular context.

A-549 cells are widely used as an experimental model for non-small cell lung cancer biology and epithelial tumor cell behavior. Their pulmonary epithelial origin makes them particularly useful for studying oncogenic signaling, growth control, metabolism, and therapeutic response in lung adenocarcinoma-associated settings. Because A-549 cells support diverse molecular and phenotypic assays, they are frequently used to examine cell-cycle regulation, drug sensitivity, epithelial signaling programs, and stress responses that are relevant to cancer progression and treatment.

RB1 encodes pRB, a central negative regulator of the G1/S transition. In its active hypophosphorylated state, pRB binds E2F family transcription factors including E2F1, E2F2, and E2F3 together with TFDP1/DP1, thereby repressing transcription of genes required for DNA replication and S-phase entry. pRB-mediated repression is further shaped through interactions with chromatin regulatory proteins such as HDAC1, SUV39H1, EZH2, and BRG1/SMARCA4. RB1 activity is regulated upstream by Cyclin D1-CCND1 complexes with CDK4 and CDK6, as well as Cyclin E-CCNE1 with CDK2, which phosphorylate pRB and relieve E2F repression; this axis is opposed by CDKN2A/p16INK4A, PP1 phosphatase, and contextual signals including TGF-beta and mitogenic growth factor pathways. Loss of RB1 is therefore expected to increase expression of E2F-responsive targets such as CCNE1, CDC6, MCM2, DHFR, TK1, and PCNA, linking the model to studies of DNA synthesis, checkpoint failure, senescence bypass, and genome instability relevant to lung cancer and other RB-pathway-driven malignancies.

In the A-549 background, RB1 deletion provides a useful system for examining how disruption of the RB-E2F checkpoint reshapes epithelial tumor cell behavior. This model can support analysis of altered G1 restriction point control, enhanced S-phase entry, changes in chromatin-associated transcriptional regulation, and interactions with TP53-CDKN1A-associated cell-cycle restraints. It is also relevant for investigating pathway dependencies that emerge when CDK4/6-RB signaling is uncoupled, as well as mechanisms of resistance or sensitivity in studies of cell-cycle-targeted therapeutics.

This knockout cell line is suited for western blotting and RT-qPCR analysis of RB-E2F pathway components, RNA-seq profiling of E2F-dependent transcriptional programs, and flow cytometry-based cell-cycle analysis to quantify G1/S redistribution. EdU or BrdU incorporation assays can be used to measure DNA replication entry, while ChIP-qPCR and co-immunoprecipitation can interrogate loss of pRB-associated transcriptional repression complexes. Additional applications include immunofluorescence-based phenotyping, apoptosis and colony formation assays, phospho-signaling studies of CDK pathway activity, and drug sensitivity experiments evaluating responses to CDK pathway modulators or agents that exploit proliferation-associated vulnerabilities. Researchers may contact Ascent Research for additional technical information, product details, or related gene-edited cell models.

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