The article represents the results of experimental studies focus on the decontamination of 12 cultures cell lines of animal origin from mycoplasmas. On the early stages of the study, the optimal allowable concentration of the drug ciprofloxacin, which was used in our laboratory to rehabilitate cell cultures from mycoplasmas, was determined. It has been experimentally established that ciprofloxacin at concentration of 20 μg/cm3 completely inhibits the reproduction and life cycle of mycoplasmas and does not cause a significant effect on the cells themselves. Ciprofloxacin in concentration of 20 μg/cm3 was added into the growth and maintenance medium for five consecutive passages to the flasks with mycoplasma-contaminated cell cultures. After forming a cell monolayer in the flasks, it was always thoroughly washed five times with Hanks' solution, and only then the medium was replaced with a supportive one. Thus, the full cycle of cell culture remediation, from the moment of seeding the cells in the flasks until the next reseeding of cells took 3-4 days. 5 cycles were performed with each cell culture affected by mycoplasmas. At the completion of rehabilitation process, the samples of cell culture supernatant from each cell culture line were collected and examined by PCR for the presence of mycoplasmas. As a result, after remediation process of cell cultures mycoplasma infection was detected in only one sample. The efficiency is 88.9 % and it proves that the drug ciprofloxacin can be successfully used for decontamination of cell cultures in scientific and industrial virological laboratories
decontamination, rehabilitation, mycoplasmas, ciprofloxacin, cell culture, PCR