HEK 293 cells were generated in 1973 by
transfection of cultures of normal human embryonic kidney cells with sheared
adenovirus 5
DNA in
Alex van der Eb's laboratory in
Leiden, the Netherlands. The cells were obtained from a single, aborted or miscarried fetus, the precise origin of which is unclear. The cells were cultured by van der Eb; the transfection with adenoviral DNA was performed by
Frank Graham, a
post-doc in van der Eb's lab. They were published in 1977 after Graham left Leiden for
McMaster University. They are called HEK since they originated in human embryonic kidney cultures, while the number 293 came from Graham's habit of numbering his experiments; the original HEK 293 cell clone was from his 293rd experiment. Graham performed the transfection a total of eight times, obtaining just one clone of cells that were cultured for several months. After presumably adapting to tissue culture, cells from this clone developed into the relatively stable HEK 293 line. Subsequent analysis has shown that the
transformation was brought about by inserting ~4.5
kilobases from the left arm of the adenoviral genome, which became incorporated into
human chromosome 19. For many years it was assumed that HEK 293 cells were generated by transformation of either a
fibroblastic,
endothelial or
epithelial cell, all of which are abundant in kidneys. However, the original adenovirus transformation was inefficient, suggesting that the cell that finally produced the HEK 293 line may have been unusual in some fashion. Graham and coworkers provided evidence that HEK 293 cells and other human cell lines generated by adenovirus transformation of human embryonic kidney cells have many properties of immature
neurons, suggesting that the adenovirus preferentially transformed a neuronal lineage cell in the original kidney culture. A comprehensive study of the genomes and
transcriptomes of HEK 293 and five derivative cell lines compared the HEK 293 transcriptome with that of human kidney, adrenal, pituitary and central nervous tissue. The HEK 293 pattern most closely resembled that of adrenal cells, which have many neuronal properties. Given the location of the
adrenal gland (
adrenal means "next to the kidney"), a few adrenal cells could plausibly have appeared in an embryonic kidney derived culture, and could be preferentially transformed by adenovirus. Adenoviruses transform neuronal lineage cells much more efficiently than typical human kidney epithelial cells. The presence of multiple X chromosomes and the lack of any trace of
Y chromosome derived sequence suggest that the source fetus was female. The 293T cell line was created in Michele Calos's lab at Stanford by
stable transfection of the HEK 293 cell line with a plasmid encoding a temperature-sensitive mutant of the
SV40 large T antigen; it was originally referred to as 293/
tsA1609neo. The first reference to the cell line as "293T" may be its use to create the
BOSC23 packaging cell line for producing retroviral particles. == Variants ==