| Literature DB >> 27924070 |
Liangtao Zhao1,2, Baobao Cai1,3,2, Zipeng Lu1,3,2, Lei Tian1,3,2, Song Guo1,2, Pengfei Wu1,3,2, Dong Qian1,2, Qingcheng Xu1,2, Kuirong Jiang1,3,2, Yi Miao1,3,4.
Abstract
Primary cultures of pancreatic stellate cells (PSCs) remain an important basis for in vitro study. However, effective methods for isolating abundant PSCs are currently lacking. We report on a novel approach to isolating PSCs from normal rat pancreases and human pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) tissue. After anaesthesia and laparotomy of the rat, a blunt cannula was inserted into the pancreatic duct through the anti-mesentery side of the duodenum, and the pancreas was slowly infused with an enzyme solution until all lobules were fully dispersed. The pancreas was then pre-incubated, finely minced and incubated to procure a cell suspension. PSCs were obtained after the cell suspension was filtered, washed and subject to gradient centrifugation with Nycodenz solution. Fresh human PDAC tissue was finely minced into 1×1×1 mm3 cubes with sharp blades. Tissue blocks were placed at the bottom of a culture plate with fresh plasma (EDTA-anti-coagulated plasma from the same patient, mixed with CaCl2) sprinkled around the sample. After culture for 5-10 days under appropriate conditions, activated PSCs were harvested. An intraductal perfusion of an enzyme solution simplified the procedure of isolation of rat PSCs, as compared with the multiple injections technique, and a modified outgrowth method significantly shortened the outgrowth time of the activated cells. Our modification in PSC isolation methods significantly increased the isolation efficiency and shortened the culture period, thus facilitating future PSC-related research.Entities:
Keywords: isolation; modification; pancreatic stellate cells
Year: 2016 PMID: 27924070 PMCID: PMC5138584 DOI: 10.7555/JBR.30.20160033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Res ISSN: 1674-8301
Fig. 1Isolation and culture of rPSCs.
Rat pancreas was slowly infused with hematoxylin, the appearance was violet, and there was no leakage (A), and when infused with 5–6 mL enzyme solution through a sterile blunt cannula (B), the volume of the pancreas was twice than the original (C). The freshly isolated rPSCs were cultured in 24-well plates. After cells were adhered, quiescent rPSCs had globular appearance and contained multiple lipid droplets (D), with blue-green autofluorescence at 320 nm (E); after passage, the PSCs showed a myofibroblastic appearance (F). rPSCs: Rat pancreatic stellate cells.
Fig. 2Isolation and culture of CaPSCs.
Human pancreatic cancer tissue blocks were seeded in a 6-well plate and dropped around plasma, while the tissue blocks in the other 6-well plate were not dropped around plasma; after 5–10 days, cells grew out from the edges of tissue blocks (A), and about 2–3 weeks later, primary cells reached 90% confluence (B). CaPSCs: Cancer associated pancreatic stellate cells.
Fig. 3Expression of characteristic pancreatic stellate cell markers in isolated cells.
A: Immunofluorescent staining of α-SMA, vimentin and GFAP; B: Immunocytochemistry staining of α-SMA, vimentin, desmin and GFAP; C: Immunofluorescent staining of CK19, Pan-CK and CD68; D: Immunocytochemistry staining of CK19, Pan-CK and CD68.