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microbes or with fresh primate or human tissues or cells which may contain agents that
use humans as hosts. One very good example of this would be working with fresh human
lymphocytes, which may contain infectious agents such as the human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) and/or hepatitis B virus. Thus, when one is working with fresh human tissue, it
is essential that the infection status of the donor is determined in advance of use and all
necessary precautions taken to eliminate or limit the risks to which the operator is exposed.
A recirculation class II cabinet would be a minimum requirement for this type of cell
culture work and the operator should be providedwith protective clothing including latex
gloves and a face mask if required. Suchwork should also be carried out under the
guidelines laid down by the UK Advisory Committee on Dangerous Pathogens (ACDP).
Apart from the risks posed by the biological material being used, the operator
should also be aware of his or her work environment and be fairly conversant with
the equipment being used, as these may also pose a serious hazard. The culture cabinet
should be serviced routinely and checked (approximately every 6 months) to ensure
its safety to the operator. Additionally the operator could ensure his or her own safety
by adopting some common precautionary measures such as refraining from eating
or drinking whilst working in the cabinet and using a pipette aid as opposed to
mouth pipetting to prevent ingestion of unwanted substances. Gloves and adequate
protective clothing such as a clean laboratory coat should be worn at all times and
gloves must be discarded after handling of non-sterile or contaminated material.

2.4 ASEPTIC TECHNIQUES AND GOOD CELL CULTURE PRACTICE


2.4.1 Good practice


In order to maintain a clean and safe culture environment, adequate aseptic or sterile
technique should be adopted at all times. This simply involves working under

Fig. 2.2Tissue culture plastics used generally for cell culture. (A–C) T-flasks; (D–G) representative of multi-well
plates. (A) T–25 (25 cm^2 ), (B) T-75 (75 cm^2 ), (C) T-225 (225 cm^2 ), (D) 96-well plate, (E) 24-well plate, (F) 12-well
plate and (G) 6-well plate.

44 Cell culture techniques
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