首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Background aimsHuman mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSC) are of enormous interest for various clinical applications. For the expansion of isolated hMSC to relevant numbers for clinical applications, 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS)-supplemented medium is commonly used. The main critical disadvantage of FBS is the possibility of transmission of infectious agents as well as the possibility of immune rejection of the transplanted cells in response to the bovine serum. Therefore, we tested a commercially available medium, Panserin 401, that was specifically developed for serum-free cell cultivation.MethodshMSC were isolated from bone marrow (BM) and expanded in either Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (DMEM) or Panserin 401 alone, or combined with FBS (2% or 10%), with or without supplementary growth factors. Cell proliferation and cytotoxicity were monitored twice a week for 3 weeks.Results and ConclusionsNo proliferation was observed in any of the serum-free media. However, DMEM/10% FBS (the conventional culture medium for hMSC) and DMEM/2% FBS with growth factors revealed moderate proliferation. Interestingly, the best proliferation was obtained using Panserin 401 supplemented with 2% FBS and growth factors (as well as with 10% FBS). Analysis of cell growth in Panserin 401 supplemented with 2% FBS only or with growth factors only revealed no proliferation, demonstrating the necessity of the combination of 2% FBS and growth factors. Efficient isolation and expansion of hMSC from cancellous bone could also be performed using Panserin 401 with 2% FBS and growth factors. Furthermore, these isolated cultures maintained multipotency, as demonstrated by adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation.  相似文献   

2.
Background aimsThe human mesenchymal stromal cell (hMSC), a type of adult stem cell with a fibroblast-like appearance, has the potential to differentiate along the mesenchymal lineage and also along other cell lineages. These abilities make hMSC a promising candidate for use in regenerative medicine. As the hMSC represents a very rare population in vivo, in vitro expansion is necessary for any clinical use. hMSC characterization is commonly carried out through the expression of specific markers and by the capability of differentiating toward at least adipo-, osteo- and chondrocytic lineages. Commitment processes also result in significant changes in the ultrastructure in order to acquire new functional abilities; however, few studies have dealt with the ultrastructural characteristics of hMSC according to the time of incubation and type of media.MethodsThe immunophenotype, functional characteristics and ultrastructural features of bone marrow (BM) hMSC cultured in two different media were investigated. The media chosen were Iscove's modified Dulbecco's medium (IMDM) and the Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (DMEM). The latter has been recommended recently by two international transplantation and cytotherapy societies, the International Society of Cellular Therapy (ISCT) and European Group for Blood and Bone Marrow Transplantation (EBMT), for hMSC expansion for clinical applications.Results and ConclusionsThe present results indicate that culture conditions greatly influence hMSC ultrastructural features, proliferation, growth and differentiation. In particular, our findings demonstrate that DMEM preserves the hMSC stem features better. Furthermore, the results obtained in IMDM suggest that a small size does not always correlate with conditions of cell immaturity and a greater proliferative potential.  相似文献   

3.
The in vitro culture behaviour of embryonic stem cells (ESC) is strongly influenced by the culture conditions. Current culture media for expansion of ESC contain some undefined substances. Considering potential clinical translation work with such cells, the use of defined media is desirable. We have used Design of Experiments (DoE) methods to investigate the composition of a serum-free chemically defined culture medium for expansion of mouse embryonic stem cells (mESC). Factor screening analysis according to Plackett–Burman revealed that insulin and leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF) had a significant positive influence on the proliferation activity of the cells, while zinc and l-cysteine reduced the cell growth. Further analysis using minimum run resolution IV (MinRes IV) design indicates that following factor adjustment LIF becomes the main factor for the survival and proliferation of mESC. In conclusion, DoE screening assays are applicable to develop and to refine culture media for stem cells and could also be employed to optimize culture media for human embryonic stem cells (hESC).  相似文献   

4.
Summary Stromal-epithelial interactions are pivotal in many aspects of prostatic biology. A defined culture system is critical for the investigation of factors that regulate the growth and differentiation of human prostatic stromal cells. We have identified conditions which promote stromal cell attachment and proliferation in serum-free medium. MCDB 201, originally developed for the clonal growth of chick embryo fibroblasts, proved to be a superior basal medium of those that we tested. Supplementation of MCDB 201 with basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF), insulin-like growth factor (IGF), and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) permitted attachment and exponential growth of cells throughout a 7-d period with an initial inoculum as low as 103 cells per well of a 96-well microtiter dish. Using these assay conditions, we subsequently verified that basic FGF and IGF, but not PDGF, were required for optimal growth. No activity was found for heparin, transferrin, or the androgen R1881. Epidermal growth factor (EGF) didn’t stimulate growth when added to medium containing basic FGF and IGF, but was moderately stimulatory when added to basal medium alone. Cholera toxin inhibited growth. This simple and efficient culture medium provides a suitable assay system for more extensive studies of growth regulation and differentiation of human prostatic stromal cells, and will provide the basis for future development of a defined medium that supports clonal growth. Characterization of stromal-epithelial interactions will be facilitated by the use of this defined culture system for stromal cells in conjunction with the serum-free culture systems previously developed for human prostatic epithelial cells.  相似文献   

5.
Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) possess three properties of great interest for the development of cell therapies and tissue engineering: multilineage differentiation, immunomodulation, and production of trophic factors. Efficient ex vivo expansion of hMSCs is a challenging requirement for large scale production of clinical grade cells. Low-cost, robust, scalable culture methods using chemically defined materials need to be developed to address this need. This study describes the use of a xeno-free synthetic peptide acrylate surface, the Corning® Synthemax® Surface, for culture of hMSCs in serum-free, defined medium. Cell performance on the Corning Synthemax Surface was compared to cells cultured on biological extracellular matrix (ECM) coatings in xeno-free defined medium and in traditional conditions on tissue culture treated (TCT) plastic in fetal bovine serum (FBS) supplemented medium. Our results show successful maintenance of hMSCs on Corning Synthemax Surface for eight passages, with cell expansion rate comparable to cells cultured on ECM and significantly higher than for cells in TCT/FBS condition. Importantly, on the Corning Synthemax Surface, cells maintained elongated, spindle-like morphology, typical hMSC marker profile and in vitro multilineage differentiation potential. We believe the Corning Synthemax Surface, in combination with defined media, provides a complete synthetic, xeno-free, cell culture system for scalable production of hMSCs.  相似文献   

6.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(4):1179-1190
Serum-free, hormonally defined media have been developed for optimal growth of a rat hepatoma cell line. The cells' hormonal requirements for growth are dramatically altered both qualitatively and quantitatively by whether they were plated onto tissue culture plastic or collagenous substrata. On collagenous substrata, the cells required insulin, glucagon, growth hormone, prolactin, and linoleic acid (bound to BSA), and zinc, copper, and selenium. For growth on tissue culture plastic, the cells required the above factors at higher concentrations plus several additional factors: transferrin, hydrocortisone, and triiodothyronine. To ascertain the relative influence of hormones versus substratum on the growth and differentiation of rat hepatoma cells, various parameters of growth and of liver-specific and housekeeping functions were compared in cells grown in serum-free, hormonally supplemented, or serum-supplemented medium and on either tissue culture plastic or type I collagen gels. The substratum was found to be the primary determinant of attachment and survival of the cells. Even in serum-free media, the cells showed attachment and survival efficiencies of 40-50% at low seeding densities and even higher efficiencies at high seeding densities when the cells were plated onto collagenous substrata. However, optimal attachment and survival efficiencies of the cells on collagenous substrata still required either serum or hormonal supplements. On tissue culture plastic, there was no survival of the cells at any seeding density without either serum or hormonal supplements added to the medium. A defined medium designed for cells plated on tissue culture plastic, containing increased levels of hormones plus additional factors over those in the defined medium designed for cells on collagenous substrata, was found to permit attachment and survival of the cells plated into serum-free medium and onto tissue culture plastic. Growth of the cells was influenced by both substrata and hormones. When plated onto collagen gel substrata as compared with tissue culture plastic, the cells required fewer hormones and growth factors in the serum-free, hormone-supplemented media to achieve optimal growth rates. Growth rates of the cells at low and high seeding densities were equivalent in the hormonally and serum-supplemented media as long as comparisons were made on the same substratum and the hormonally supplemented medium used was the one designed for that substratum. For a given medium, either serum or hormonally supplemented, the saturation densities were highest for tissue culture plastic as compared with collagen gels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Background aimsFirst-trimester chorionic villi (CV) are an attractive source of human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSC) for possible applications in cellular therapy and regenerative medicine. Human MSC from CV were monitored for genetic stability in long-term cultures.MethodsWe set up a good manufacturing practice cryopreservation procedure for small amounts of native CV samples. After isolation, hMSC were in vitro cultured and analyzed for biological end points. Genome stability at different passages of expansion was explored by karyotype, genome-wide array-comparative genomic hybridization and microsatellite genotyping.ResultsGrowth curve analysis revealed a high proliferative potential of CV-derived cells. Immunophenotyping showed expression of typical MSC markers and absence of hematopoietic markers. Analysis of multilineage potential demonstrated efficient differentiation into adipocytes, osteocytes, chondrocytes and induction of neuro-glial commitment. In angiogenic experiments, differentiation in endothelial cells was detected by in vitro Matrigel assay after vascular endothelial growth factor stimulation. Data obtained from karyotyping, array-comparative genomic hybridization and microsatellite genotyping comparing early with late DNA passages did not show any genomic variation at least up to passage 10. Aneuploid clones appeared in four of 14 cases at latest passages, immediately before culture growth arrest.ConclusionsOur findings indicate that hCV-MSC are genetically stable in long-term cultures at least up to passage 10 and that it is possible to achieve clinically relevant amounts of hCV-MSC even after few stages of expansion. Genome abnormalities at higher passages can occasionally occur and are always associated with spontaneous growth arrest. Under these circumstances, hCV-MSC could be suitable for therapeutic purposes.  相似文献   

8.
Dissociated embryonic chick dorsal root ganglionic cells were plated on collagen-coated tissue culture dishes in Eagle's basal medium containing 10% fetal calf serum (FCS). After 48 h, which allowed adequate cell attachment, the cultures were washed with serum-free medium and then received fresh medium supplemented with 10% FCS or serum-free defined medium (N1), which was supplemented with insulin, transferrin, progesterone, putrescine and selenium. In addition, both media required the addition of Nerve Growth Factor (NGF). N1 medium selectively maintained the neurons and did not support proliferation or even survival of almost all non-neuronal elements (fibroblasts and Schwann cells). Survival of neurons in N1 was initially as good and eventually better than in serum-containing medium. After 6 days in N1 the cultures consisted almost entirely of neurons (>95%), which had smaller cell bodies but more extensive process formation than in serum-supplemented medium. The omission of any one of the supplements resulted in a reduction of neuron survival. The ability to generate cultures of pure neurons in a serum-free defined medium may be useful for studying (i) the role of specific hormones and growth factors normally supplied by serum in the maintenance of neurons and (ii) biochemical parameters of neurons in the absence of the substantial background due to non-neuronal elements.  相似文献   

9.
Background aimsMesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) are of interest for the treatment of graft-versus-host disease, autoimmune diseases, osteoarthritis and neurological and cardiovascular diseases. Increasing numbers of clinical trials emphasize the need for standardized manufacturing of these cells. However, many challenges related to diverse isolation and expansion protocols and differences in cell tissue sources exist. As a result, the cell products used in numerous trials vary greatly in characteristics and potency.MethodsThe authors have established a standardized culture platform using xeno- and serum-free commercial media for expansion of MSCs derived from umbilical cord (UC), bone marrow and adipose-derived (AD) and examined their functional characteristics.ResultsMSCs from the tested sources stably expanded in vitro and retained their biomarker expression and normal karyotype at early and later passages and after cryopreservation. MSCs were capable of colony formation and successfully differentiated into osteogenic, adipogenic and chondrogenic lineages. Pilot expansion of UC-MSCs and AD-MSCs to clinical scale revealed that the cells met the required quality standard for therapeutic applications.ConclusionsThe authors’ data suggest that xeno- and serum-free culture conditions are suitable for large-scale expansion and enable comparative study of MSCs of different origins. This is of importance for therapeutic purposes, especially because of the numerous variations in pre-clinical and clinical protocols for MSC-based products.  相似文献   

10.
Because of ethical and scientific controversy, the utilization of fetal bovine serum (FBS) for cell culture medium must be minimized. This study develops porcine platelet-rich plasma (P-PRP) as a FBS substitute for human mesenchymal stem cell (hMSC) cultivation. Concentrating porcine blood by serial centrifugation to obtain P-PRP leads to activation by different agonist combinations to stimulate the secretion of growth factors. The concentration of growth factor in P-PRP is significantly increased by activation (p < 0.05). The concentration of PDGF, KGF and TGF-β in activated P-PRP is significantly higher than that in FBS. Design-expert was used to decide whether Co−T+Ca−, Co+T−Ca−, and Co+T+Ca− are optimal agonist formulations. MSC cultivation shows that the attachment rate, proliferation rate and viability of P-PRP supplemented media are significantly higher than those for FBS-supplemented and commercial media (p < 0.05). The results demonstrate that P-PRP is an optimal FBS substitute that supports in vitro h-MSCs expansion for subsequent biomedical applications.  相似文献   

11.
Stem cell-based therapies depend on the reliable expansion of patient-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in vitro. The supplementation of cell culture media with serum is associated with several risks; accordingly, serum-free media are commercially available for cell culture. Furthermore, hypoxia is known to accelerate the expansion of MSCs. The present study aimed to characterize the properties of periodontal ligament-derived MSCs (PDLSCs) cultivated in serum-free and serum-containing media, under hypoxic and normoxic conditions. Cell growth, gene and protein expression, cytodifferentiation potential, genomic stability, cytotoxic response, and in vivo hard tissue generation of PDLSCs were examined. Our findings indicated that cultivation in serum-free medium does not affect the MSC phenotype or chromosomal stability of PDLSCs. PDLSCs expanded in serum-free medium exhibited more active growth than in fetal bovine serum-containing medium. We found that hypoxia does not alter the cell growth of PDLSCs under serum-free conditions, but inhibits their osteogenic and adipogenic cytodifferentiation while enabling maintenance of their multidifferentiation potential regardless of the presence of serum. PDLSCs expanded in serum-free medium were found to retain common MSC characteristics, including the capacity for hard tissue formation in vivo. However, PDLSCs cultured in serum-free culture conditions were more susceptible to damage following exposure to extrinsic cytotoxic stimuli than those cultured in medium supplemented with serum, suggesting that serum-free culture conditions do not exert protective effects against cytotoxicity on PDLSC cultures. The present work provides a comparative evaluation of cell culture in serum-free and serum-containing media, under hypoxic and normoxic conditions, for applications in regenerative medicine.  相似文献   

12.
《Cytotherapy》2014,16(7):915-926
BackgroundThere is a growing interest in mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) because they are regarded as good candidates for cell therapy. Adipose tissue represents an easily accessible source to derive mesenchymal stem cells (Ad-MSCs) non-invasively in large numbers. The aim of this study was to evaluate a defined serum-free medium for in vitro expansion of MSCs as a prerequisite for their clinical use.MethodsAdipose tissue was isolated from healthy donors. Cells were isolated and expanded for five passages in serum-free medium (Mesencult-XF) and Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (DMEM-FBS). MSC morphology, marker expression, viability, population doubling time and differentiation potential toward osteogenic and adipogenic lineages were evaluated. Bone marrow MSCs were included as controls.ResultsAd-MSCs cultured in Mesencult-XF had shorter population doubling time (33.3 ± 13.7 h) compared with those cultured in DMEM-FBS (54.3 ± 41.0 h, P < 0.05). Ad-MSCs cultured in Mesencult-XF displayed a stable morphology and surface marker expression and a higher differentiation potential in comparison to Ad-MSCs cultured in DMEM-FBS.ConclusionsThe defined serum-free and xeno-free Mesencult-XF media appear to be a good choice for Ad-MSCs, but it is not as good in supporting culture of bone marrow MSCs when the cells are to be used for clinical purposes.  相似文献   

13.
Muscle bioengineering is proposed as a treatment option for various conditions requiring restoration of muscle function. In order to allow for rapid clinical translation culture conditions have to be optimized for human application. The optimal isolation and culture technique should be able to support cell growth and differentiation using defined media only. Therefore, we have evaluated alternative culture conditions to determine the optimal growth condition for the engineering of human skeletal muscle. In this research, we present protocols for consistent isolation and growth of human muscle precursor cells (MPCs). MPCs were grown from human biopsies and expanded in culture using defined media and collagen coated dishes only. The best results were achieved using a one-step pre-plating and by supplementing the growth medium with insulin, dexamethasone, human basic fibroblast growth factor (hFGF) and human epithelial growth factor (hEGF). Detailed cell characterization using fluorescence-activated cell-sorting analysis and morphological analysis at different passages were performed. Further, the applicability of these cells for tissue engineering purposes was assessed by measuring expansion potential, formation of myofibers and fused myotubes. We have established a culture technique for human MPCs that allows for reliable cell growth and expansion using collagen coated dishes and defined media only. Cell characterization demonstrated a muscle phenotype and the ability to form myofibers in vitro.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Background aimsMesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) with similar properties to bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (BM-MSC) have recently been grown from the limbus of the human cornea. We have evaluated methods for culturing human limbal MSC (L-MSC).MethodsFour basic strategies were compared: serum-supplemented medium (10% fetal bovine serum; FBS), standard serum-free medium supplemented with B-27, epidermal growth factor and fibroblast growth factor 2, or one of two commercial serum-free media, defined keratinocyte serum-free medium (Invitrogen) and MesenCult-XF® (Stem Cell Technologies). The resulting cultures were examined using photography, flow cytometry (for CD34, CD45, CD73, CD90, CD105, CD141 and CD271), immunocytochemistry (alpha-smooth muscle actin; α-sma), differentiation assays (osteogenesis, adipogenesis and chrondrogenesis) and co-culture experiments with human limbal epithelial (HLE) cells.ResultsWhile all techniques supported the establishment of cultures to varying degrees, sustained growth and serial propagation were only achieved in 10% FBS medium or MesenCult-XF medium. Cultures established in 10% FBS medium were 70–80% CD34? CD45? CD90+ CD73+ CD105+, approximately 25% α-sma+ and displayed multipotency. Cultures established in MesenCult-XF were > 95% CD34? CD45? CD90+ CD73+ CD105+, 40% CD141+, rarely expressed α-sma, and displayed multipotency. L-MSC supported growth of HLE cells, with the largest epithelial islands being observed in the presence of MesenCult-XF-grown L-MSC. All HLE cultures supported by L-MSC widely expressed the progenitor cell marker ?Np63, along with the corneal differentiation marker cytokeratin 3.ConclusionsMesenCult-XF is a superior culture system for L-MSC, but further studies are required to explore the significance of CD141 expression in these cells.  相似文献   

16.
《Cytotherapy》2022,24(10):1049-1059
Background aimsMesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are one of the most frequently used cell types in regenerative medicine and cell therapy. Generating sufficient cell numbers for MSC-based therapies is constrained by (i) their low abundance in tissues of origin, which imposes the need for significant ex vivo cell expansion; (ii) donor-specific characteristics, including MSC frequency/quality, that decline with disease state and increasing age; and (iii) cellular senescence, which is promoted by extensive cell expansion and results in decreased therapeutic functionality. The final yield of a manufacturing process is therefore primarily determined by the applied isolation procedure and its efficiency in isolating therapeutically active cells from donor tissue. To date, MSCs are predominantly isolated using media supplemented with either serum or its derivatives, which poses safety and consistency issues.MethodsTo overcome these limitations while enabling robust MSC production with constant high yield and quality, the authors developed a chemically defined biomimetic surface coating called isoMATRIX (denovoMATRIX GmbH, Dresden, Germany) and tested its performance during isolation of MSCs.ResultsThe isoMATRIX facilitates the isolation of significantly higher numbers of MSCs in xenogeneic (xeno)/serum-free and chemically defined conditions. The isolated cells display a smaller cell size and higher proliferation rate than those derived from a serum-containing isolation procedure and a strong immunomodulatory capacity. The high proliferation rates can be maintained up to 5 passages after isolation and cells even benefit from a switch towards a proliferation-specific MSC matrix (myMATRIX MSC) (denovoMATRIX GmbH, Dresden, Germany).ConclusionIn sum, isoMATRIX promotes enhanced xeno/serum-free and chemically defined isolation of human MSCs and supports consistent and reliable cell performance for improved stem cell-based therapies.  相似文献   

17.
BackgroundDendritic cells (DCs) that are derived from hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are the most potent antigen-presenting cells and play a pivotal role in initiating the immune response. Hence, large-scale production and direct induction of functional DCs ex vivo from HSCs are crucial to HSC research and clinical potential, such as vaccines for cancer and immune therapy.MethodsIn a previous study, we developed a serum-free HSC expansion system (SF-HSC medium) to expand large numbers of primitive HSCs ex vivo. Herein, a DC induction and expansion medium (DC medium) was proposed to further generate large numbers of functional DCs from serum-free expanded HSCs, which were developed and optimized by factorial design and the steepest ascent method.ResultsThe DC medium is composed of effective basal medium (Iscove's modified Dulbecco's medium [IMDM]) and cytokines (2.9 ng/mL stem cell factor [SCF], 2.1 ng/mL Flt-3 ligand, 3.6 ng/mL interleukin [IL]-1β, 19.3 ng/mL granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor [GM-CSF] and 20.0 ng/mL tumor necrosis factor-α [TNF-α]). After 10-day culture in DC medium, the maximum fold expansion for accumulated CD1a+CD11c+ DCs was more than 4000-fold, and the induced DCs were characterized and confirmed by analysis of growth kinetics, surface antigen expression, endocytosis ability, mixed lymphocyte reaction, specific cytokine secretion and lipopolysaccharide stimulation.DiscussionIn conclusion, the combination of DC medium and SF-HSC medium can efficiently induce and expand a large amount of functional DCs from a small scale of HSCs and might be a promising source of DCs for vaccine and immune therapy in the near future.  相似文献   

18.
毛梦婷  张瑾  文姣  陈波  廖丽 《微生物学报》2023,63(6):2066-2077
【目的】南极洲具备独特的环境和相对的生物地理隔离,南极洲各类生境中蕴藏了大量尚未培养和难培养的微生物,也是新颖微生物物种的重要来源之一。本研究以南极冰锥洞这类特殊生境为研究对象,通过培养条件的多样化提升南极微生物的培养率和多样性,揭示南极冰锥洞可培养微生物类群多样性,为该环境可培养微生物功能研究奠定基础,也为南极极端环境未培养微生物的培养方法提供借鉴。【方法】通过采用不同培养基添加复苏促进因子(resuscitation promoting factor, Rpf)的方式,提高南极柯林斯冰盖冰锥洞生境中微生物的可培养率,探究该生境中微生物的多样性。采用4种不同营养水平的培养基,平行添加Rpf进行菌株培养,经分离纯化与16S rRNA基因鉴定,分析冰锥洞可培养微生物的多样性及培养条件对多样性的影响。【结果】本研究共分离培养细菌407株,涵盖5个门、18个科、29个属,其中:放线菌门(Actinomycetota)为优势门,占72.73%;微杆菌科(Microbacteriaceae)为优势科,占69.78%;Lacisediminihabitans属为优势属,占45.70%。从培养基效果...  相似文献   

19.
20.
Summary Serum-free tissue culture medium consisting of a 1∶1 mixture of Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) and Ham's F12 medium is herein shown to support growth of Reuber H-35 cells over several days in culture. Cells were initially plated in serum containing DMEM medium for 3 h. After cell attachment, serum is removed and replaced with a serum-free 1∶1 mixture of these two commercially available tissue culture media. The doubling time of cell growth in this unsupplemented serum-free medium was 46 h in lightly plated cultures over the first 5 d. The presence of transferrin (5 μg/ml) and insulin (3.3 nM) results in a cell doubling time of 17 h, which equaled the growth rate in medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum. In the absence of transferrin, growth rates in serum-free medium were correlated with the cell density of cultures. Conditioned medium from dense, serum-free cultures has growth-stimulating activity in recipient lightly plated cultures. This simple, serum-free culture medium will facilitate studies on the growth regulation of H-35 rat hepatoma cells. This work was funded by a feasibility grant from the American Diabetes Association, as well as by the National Institutes of Health grants CA 24604-09 and CA 16463-14.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号