thank you for your reply. the accient has been recorded and i have made some inquiries into the nature of the 3rd generation lentiviruses. of course, the accident was stupid and should never happen again, but the probability of serious health hazards seems to be (at least so i can tell in my case) very low. presence of any viral particles after washing and trypsinizing the cells twice already decreases viral titers greatly. the half-life of lentiviruses in cell culture (on acceptor cells, not the producer cell line) is about a day or so and i cultured for several days after removing the viral supernatant. however, half life seems to be increased in cell cultures harbouring macrophages or dedritic cells (internalization of viral particles and subsequent release)
moreover, recombination events which could give rise to virus competent of reproduction have not yet been observed (at least 4 recombinations in non-homologous regions would have to take place ...). last but not least, essential genes responsible for pathogenicity of HIV have been deleted - thus, it is impossible to generate wild type HIV just by uncontrolled recombination of the lentiviral vector genome.
therefore, the greatest risk seems to be insertional mutagenesis and incorporation of the transgene into the researchers genome.
Nonetheless, lifting coverslides with pincers alone is a torture - the coverslides appear to 'stick' to the bottom of the cell culture dish and you have to get underneath somehow (that is what i use the thin, sharp needle for...) - does anyone know a technique (simple as it may be) in order to lift coverslides without help of sharp object such as needles?
thank you and cheers