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 781 毫秒
1.
Experimental conditions have been defined that allow bovine corneal endothelial (BCE) cells to grow in the complete absence of serum. Low density BCE cell cultures maintained on extracellular matrix (ECM)-coated dishes and plated in the total absence of serum proliferate actively when exposed to a synthetic medium supplemented with high density lipoprotein (HDL 500 μg protein/ml), transferrin (10 μg/ml), insulin (5 μg/ml), and fibroblast (FGP) or epidermal growth factor (EGF) added at concentrations of 100 or 50 ng/ml, respectively. Omission of any of these components results in a lower growth rate and/or final cell density of the cultures. BCE cell cultures plated on plastic dishes and exposed to the same synthetic medium grow very poorly. The longevity of BCE cultures maintained on plastic versus ECM and exposed to serum-free versus serum-containing medium has been studied. The use of ECM-coated dishes extended the life span of BCE cultures maintained in serum-supplemented medium to over 120 generations, as compared to less than 20 generations for cultures maintained on plastic. Likewise, BCE cells maintained on ECM and exposed to a synthetic medium supplemented with optimal concentrations of HDL, transferrin, insulin, and FGF underwent 85 generations, whereas control cultures maintained on plastic could not be passaged. The enhancing effect of ECM on BCE cell growth and culture longevity clearly illustrates the importance of the cell substrate in the control of proliferation of these cells.  相似文献   

2.
Low density vascular smooth muscle (VSM) cell cultures maintained on extracellular-matrix(ECM)-coated dishes and plated in the presence of either plasma or serum will proliferate actively when serum-containing medium is replaced by a synthetic medium supplemented with three factors: high density lipoprotein (HDL, 250 micrograms protein/ml); insulin (2.5 micrograms/ml) or somatomedin C (10 ng/ml); and fibroblast growth factor (FGF, 100 ng/ml) or epidermal growth factor (EGF, 50 ng/ml). The omission of any of these three factors from the synthetic medium results in a lower growth rate of the cultures, as well as in a lower final cell density once cultures reach confluence. When cells are plated in the total absence of serum, transferrin (10 micrograms/ml) is also required to induce optimal cell growth. The effects of the substrate and medium supplements on the life span of VSM cultures have also been analyzed. Cultures maintained on plastic and exposed to medium supplemented with 5% bovine serum underwent 15 generations. However, when maintained on ECM-coated dishes the serum-fed cultures had a life span of at least 88 generations. Likewise, when cultures were maintained in a synthetic medium supplemented with HDL and either FGF or EGF, an effect on the tissue culture life span by the substrate was observed. Cultures maintained on plastic underwent 24 generations, whereas those maintained on ECM-coated dishes could be passaged repeatedly for 58 generations. These experiments demonstrate the influence of the ECM-substrate only in promoting cell growth but also in increasing the longevity of the cultures.  相似文献   

3.
Baby hamster kidney-derived cells (BHK-21 cell line), seeded at low density on gelatin coated dishes and exposed to a 1:1 (v/v) mixture of Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium and Ham's F-12 medium, proliferate actively when exposed to high density lipoproteins (HDL), transferrin, and basic or acidic fibroblast growth factor (FGF). This serum free medium combination supported cell multiplication at a rate equal to that of serum supplemented medium, and at low cell input (10(3) cells/35-mm dish). Epidermal growth factor (EGF), although mitogenic for BHK-21 cells, was less efficient than either basic or acidic FGF in supporting cell growth. When the potency of basic and acidic FGF were compared, acidic FGF was 10-fold less potent than basic FGF. The requirement of BHK-21 cells for transferrin appears to be minimal since cells exposed to HDL and basic FGF could be serially transferred for at least 50 cumulative population doublings in the absence of transferrin.  相似文献   

4.
Liposomes made by sonication of egg yolk phosphatidyl choline support the proliferation of low-density bovine vascular and corneal endothelial cells, and vascular smooth muscle cells maintained on basement laminacoated dishes and exposed to a defined medium supplemented with transferrin. The optimal growth-promoting effect of phosphatidyl choline was observed at concentrations of 25 μg/ml for low-density cultures of vascular smooth muscle cells, and 100 μg/ml for vascular and corneal endothelial cells. The growth rate and final cell density of vascular endothelial cells exposed to a synthetic medium supplemented with transferrin and either high-density lipoproteins or phosphatidyl choline has been compared. Although cultures exposed to phosphatidyl choline reached a final cell density similar to that of cultures exposed to high-density lipoproteins, they had a longer average doubling time (17 h vs. 12 h) during their logarithmic growth phase and a shorter lifespan (17 generations vs. 30 generations). Similar observations were made in the case of vascular smooth muscle cells or bovine corneal endothelial cells maintained in medium supplemented with transferrin, fibroblast growth factor (FGF) or epidermal growth factor (EGF), and insulin and exposed to either high-density lipoproteins or phosphatidyl choline. Since phosphatidyl choline can, for the most part, replace highdensity lipoproteins in supporting the proliferation of various cell types, it is likely that the growth stimulating signal conveyed by high-density lipoproteins is associated with its polar lipid fraction, which is composed mostly of phosphatidyl cholines.  相似文献   

5.
Summary BC3H1 myoblast cells seeded at low density on gelatin-coated dishes and exposed to a 1∶1 (vol/vol) mixture of Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium and Ham’s F12 medium, proliferate actively when exposed to high density lipoproteins (HDL), transferrin, insulin, and basic or acidic fibroblast growth factor (FGF). This serum-free medium combination supported cell multiplication at a rate equal to that of serum-supplemented medium, and at low cell input (103 cells/35-mm dish). It also allowed serial transfer of the cultures under serum-free conditions. HDL seems to promote cell survival and to act as progression factor allowing cells to divide when exposed to either basic or acidic FGF. When the potency of basic and acidic FGF were compared, acidic FGF was 20-fold less potent than basic FGF.  相似文献   

6.
Cultured human endothelial cells preincubated with the infranatant of human serum increased their content of cholesterol when subsequently exposed to low density lipoproteins (LDL) as compared to control cultures further incubated in the presence of infranatant only. Replacing LDL with high density lipoproteins (HDL) resulted in no change in the cellular cholesterol content compared to the control. The addition of HDL did not influence the increase in cellular cholesterol content mediated by LDL. HDL stimulated the efflux of endogenously synthesized 14C-labelled sterols compared to the infranatant fraction, whereas LDL had only a slight effect. Cells preincubated with whole serum did not change their cholesterol content when subsequently exposed to LDL, compared to cultures further incubated in presence of whole serum. Replacing whole serum (during the final incubation) with infranatant, resulted in a decrease of the cellular cholesterol content, which was not influenced by further addition of HDL.  相似文献   

7.
The proliferation and morphological differentiation of bovine kidney collecting-tubule epithelial cells has been examined as a function of substrata and plasma factors. Collecting kidney tubule explant maintained in vitro gave rise to two distinct cell populations; one was composed mostly of fibroblastic cells whereas the other was epithelioid (EP cells). The proliferation of fibroblastic cells when exposed to serum-supplemented medium was best expressed when cells were maintained on a basement membrane produced by bovine corneal endothelial cells. This basement membrane has a composition, which in previous studies has been shown to favor the proliferation of mesenchymal cells. In contrast, the proliferation of EP cells was best expressed when cells were maintained on a basement membrane produced by the mouse-derived endodermal cell line PF-HR-9 (HR-9-BM). This basement membrane has a biochemical composition very similar to the basement membrane underlying the kidney tubules. Although the fibroblast confluent monolayer maintained on bovine corneal endothelial cell extracellular matrix did not undergo morphogenesis, the confluent monolayer of EP cells maintained on HR-9-BM shows hemicyst formation, suggesting that they were capable of vectorial fluid transport. They also built a complex three-dimensional kidney tubulelike network. Some tubules became grossly visible and floated into the tissue culture medium, remaining tethered to the cell monolayer at either end of the tubule. On an ultrastructural level, the tubules consisted of cells held together with junctional complexes arranged so as to form a lumen. The smallest lumen were bordered by 2-3 cells, and the largest ones by 8-15 cells. The lumens of the larger tubules did contain granular fibrillar and amorphous debris. Low-density EP cell cultures maintained on HR-9-BM could be induced to proliferate at a rate approaching that of cultures exposed to serum when they were exposed to medium supplemented with high-density lipoprotein (HDL, 750 micrograms protein/ml) and transferrin (50 micrograms/ml). When exposed to HDL concentrations equal or lower than 250 micrograms protein/ml, low-density cultures proliferated at a slow rate and readily formed tubulelike structures. This observation indicates that EP cells do not need to reach confluence to undergo morphogenesis, and that HDL, which in the presence of transferrin supports the cell proliferation, can favor their differentiation into tubulelike structures once its concentration becomes limiting for mitogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Transforming growth factors (TGFs) are a relatively new category of factors that induce the anchorage-independent growth of non-transformed cells. These factors are usually detected by their ability to induce normal rat kidney (NRK) fibroblasts to grow in soft agar. Until now, this assay has been performed in serum-containing medium (SCM). Unfortunately, the background activity of this assay is variable and dependent on several factors, including passage number of the cells and the serum lot used. Furthermore, the addition of either EGF or TGF-β alone results in the appearance of additional colonies, which decreases the sensitivity of the assay. To circumvent these problems, serum-free media have been developed that support the growth of the NRK cells at low density in both monolayer culture and soft agar. Long-term growth in monolayer cultures occurs in serum-free medium supplemented with laminin, insulin, transferrin, epidermal growth factor (EGF), fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and high density lipoprotein (HDL). Growth in soft agar occurs when TGFs are added to a serum-free medium, AIG medium, that contains insulin, transferrin, FGF and HDL. In contrast to the background activity observed when the assay is performed in SCM, no colonies form in the AIG medium unless TGFs are added and few, if any, colonies form if EGF or TGF-β are added alone. Thus, the AIG medium provides an improved assay for TGFs. In addition, the AIG medium should prove useful for examining other factors, including serum factors, for TGF activity. Editor's Statement This communication describes a modification of the standard assay for transforming growth factors. The techniques employed make use of advantages provided by recent advances in serum-free cell culture to provide a well-defined detection system that is more sensitive than conventional procedures. Experimental approaches described in this article also should be helpful in unraveling differences in cellular behavior encountered under anchorage-dependent vs. anchorage-independent conditions. D. W. Barnes  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Bovine adrenal cortex cells maintained on extracellular matrix (ECM)-coated dishes will proliferate actively when serum is replaced by HDL (25 micrograms protein/ml), insulin (10 ng/ml), and FGF (100 ng/ml). The cells have an absolute requirement for HDL in order to survive and grow. The omission of insulin, FGF, or both results in a slower growth rate and lower final cell density of the cultures. A requirement for transferrin (1 microgram/ml) becomes apparent only when cells have been grown for at least four generations in the absence of serum. Early passage (P1-P3) bovine adrenal cortex cells cultured in serum-free medium responded to ACTH (10(-8)M) with increased 11-deoxycortisol production; this effect was not observed in later passage cells (P7-P15). The cells' ability to utilize LDL-derived cholesterol and to respond to db cAMP (1mM) by increased steroid release was preserved in cells cultured for over 60 generations in the serum-free medium. HDL, although also able to increase steroid production in early-passage cultures exposed to ACTH or to ACTH and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (db cAMP), was 10 fold less potent than LDL. It did not support steroidogenesis in cultures not exposed to these trophic agents. The life span of bovine adrenal cortex cells grown in the serum-free medium on fibronectin (FN)- versus ECM-coated dishes was compared. Cells seeded in serum-containing medium and grown in serum-free medium had a life span of 34 versus 60 generations when maintained on fibronectin- or ECM-coated dishes, respectively. Cells seeded in the complete absence of serum in the serum-free medium on ECM- or fibronectin-coated dishes could be passaged for 26 or 13 generations, respectively. While FGF was an absolute requirement for cells cultured on fibronectin-coated dishes, it was not required when cells were maintained on ECM. These observations demonstrate the influence of the ECM not only in promoting cell growth and differentiation but also on the life span of cultured cells.  相似文献   

11.
MDCK cells maintained on extracellular matrix (ECM)-coated dishes and exposed to Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DME) supplemented with transferrin and either high-density lipoproteins (HDLs) or phosphatidyl choline (PC) liposomes have a growth rate and final cell density similar to those of cultures exposed to serum-supplemented DME. When MDCK cells are exposed to a medium consisting of a mixture (1:1) of DME and F12 medium (D/F), the addition of transferrin (10 μg/ml) alone supports cell growth and the presence of HDLs or PC liposomes is no longer required. MDCK cells exposed to D/F medium supplemented with transferrin can be passaged for more than 50 generations in total absence of serum. The F12 components that support growth in the absence of HDLs or PC liposomes are biotin (which is absent in DME) and choline (which is present in insufficient concentration in DME). Supplementation of DME with transferrin, biotin (3.6 ng/ml), and choline (10 μg/ml) allows optimal growth of MDCK cells and permits serial propagation through more than 50 generations. The growth requirement of MDCK cells for HDLs or PC liposomes can therefore be replaced by adequate concentrations of biotin and choline. The widely observed fact that a combination of DME/F12 medium is more effective than DME alone in supporting cell growth may be due in part to the lack of biotin and suboptimal choline concentration in DME.  相似文献   

12.
Summary An improved Ham’s F12 nutrient medium supplemented with epidermal growth factor (EGF), insulin (INS), and transferrin (TF) was developed for continuous proliferation and clonal growth of primary rabbit tracheal epithelial (TE) cells in culture. The addition of small quantities of fetal bovine serum (FBS) (0.01 to 0.1%) to cultures had little measurable stimulation on TE cell growth and plating efficiency. However, serum levels higher than 0.1% inhibited cell growth and also masked the growth stimulating activities of EGF and INS despite an increase in cell attachment. Under this defined, hormone-supplemented medium, and in the presence of a trace amount of serum (0.01%), 10 to 20% of the protease-dissociated TE cells attached to the culture dish followed by at least four population doublings during 7 to 10 d of culture. Clonal growth occurred at a seeding density of 17 cells/cm2 with a plating efficiency of 6 to 8%. Confluent primary cultures could be passaged two to four times by treatment with a 0.1% trypsin-1 mM EDTA solution and a total of 10 to 30 population doublings of in vitro life span were obtained. The epithelial nature of cultured cells was confirmed by indirect immunofluorescent staining with antikeratin antibody as well as by transmission electron microscopy. This study shows that using this improved hormone-supplemented medium, rabbit TE cells can be maintained in culture for extended periods of time without the aid of a fibroblast feeder layer or explant tissue. This system could be useful for the study of cell differentiation of tracheal epithelium.  相似文献   

13.
The implication of protein phosphorylation in the mitogenic action of high density lipoproteins (HDL) on bovine vascular endothelial cells was investigated by incubating endothelial cell cultures in the presence of 32P-labeled phosphoric acid. The incorporation of 32P into proteins was measured after fractionation by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and autoradiography of the gel. In endothelial cells seeded at low density and made quiescent by serum starvation, HDL markedly and consistently enhanced the degree of phosphorylation of a Mr 27,000 protein in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Using 500 micrograms/ml HDL, 32P labeling of the 27-kDa protein was already measurable after 10 min of incubation and reached a maximum at 20-30 min. Minimal effective dose of HDL during a 30-min incubation period was in the range of 5-10 micrograms/ml. While the apolipoprotein moiety of HDL was able to mimic the effect of total HDL, the lipid part of HDL was not. Furthermore, fibroblast growth factor appeared to potentiate the effect of HDL on 27-kDa protein phosphorylation, in agreement with the synergism observed between fibroblast growth factor and HDL on endothelial cell proliferation. Two activators of protein kinase C, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate and 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol also induced the phosphorylation of the 27-kDa protein. These results suggest that the 27-kDa protein may be a physiological substrate for protein kinase C and that HDL could exert their mitogenic effect on endothelial cells through activation of protein kinase C and subsequent protein phosphorylation.  相似文献   

14.
We examined the influence of glucocorticoid hormones on the proliferation of cultured adult bovine aortic smooth muscle cells (BASM) using both primary mass cultures and a cloned strain. Cloned BASM cells maintained on plastic culture dishes were inhibited by approximately 40% by dexamethasone treatment but showed no inhibition when grown of homologous extracellular matrix (ECM) coated dishes. Dexamethasone inhibited growth of primary cultures by 73% on plastic and by 45% on ECM. The inhibitory effect was specific for the glucocorticoids, dexamethasone, corticosterone, and cortisol and was not observed with progesterone, aldosterone, estradiol or 17-alpha OH progesterone. In cloned cells, the abolition of glucocorticoid inhibition by ECM was independent of seeding density and serum concentration. The inhibition on plastic was dependent on serum concentrations greater than 1% and resulted in both a slow rate of proliferation and a lower saturation density. A specific subset of peptides detected on two-dimensional gels was induced by glucocorticoids under growth inhibitory conditions but was not induced when the cells were grown on ECM. Primary cultures grown on ECM and exposed to Dulbecco's modified Eagle's Medium (DME) containing high density lipoprotein and transferrin grew at 40% of the rate observed for cultures exposed to DME with 10% serum. Both conditions showed growth inhibition of 70% in the presence of dexamethasone. The addition of epidermal and platelet-derived growth factors in DME containing high density lipoprotein and transferrin to cells grown on ECM resulted in growth rates comparable to that observed with cultures exposed to 10% serum and were inhibited 45% by dexamethasone. These results suggest that glucocorticoids inhibit smooth muscle proliferation by decreasing the sensitivity of the cells to mitogenic stimulation by high density lipoprotein when the cells are maintained on a homologous substrate.  相似文献   

15.
Serum-free mouse embryo cells: growth responses in vitro   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We have derived serum-free mouse embryo (SFME) cultures in a basal nutrient medium supplemented with insulin, transferrin, epidermal growth factor (EGF), high-density lipoprotein (HDL), and fibronectin. These cells are nontumorigenic, lack gross chromosomal aberrations, and exhibit several other unique properties, including dependence on EGF for survival and growth inhibition by serum. We have examined the concentration dependence of the growth stimulatory effects of protein supplements used in the SFME medium formulation and surveyed other supplements that might act as alternative or complementary additions to the culture medium. Insulin could be replaced by insulin-like growth factor I and EGF could be replaced by transforming growth factor alpha in the same concentration range. Transferrin could be replaced by higher concentrations of lactoferrin. Deterioration of cultures in the absence of EGF began within 8 hours of the removal of the growth factor, and could be prevented by the addition of fibroblast growth factor/heparin-binding growth factor. Attachment proteins other than fibronectin were effective on SFME cells, but limited success was obtained when substituting other lipid preparations for HDL. These data introduce a precise system for exploring the unusual characteristics of SFME cells and contribute additional information that may be useful in the extension of these approaches to other cell types and species.  相似文献   

16.
Human lymphocytes respond optimally to mitogenic stimulation when cultured in serum-free medium supplemented with transferrin if fatty acids necessary for maximal proliferation are provided. Either lipoproteins or exogenous fatty acids support optimal lymphocyte responses. The current studies examined the role of cell surface receptors for low density lipoprotein (LDL) in the enhancement of lymphocyte proliferation. Support of lymphocyte growth by limiting concentrations of LDL was found to involve interaction of the lipoprotein with LDL receptors. Thus, modification of LDL by reductive methylation so as to inhibit receptor-mediated interactions markedly decreased the capacity of LDL to enhance lymphocyte proliferation. Moreover, growth of lymphocytes obtained from patients with LDL receptor-negative homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia was minimal when cultures were supplemented with low concentrations of LDL (less than 10 micrograms cholesterol/ml). LDL also enhanced lymphocyte proliferation by a receptor-independent mechanism since high concentrations (greater than or equal to 50 micrograms cholesterol/ml) supported growth of both normal and familial hypercholesterolemia lymphocytes. In contrast, support of lymphocyte proliferation by high density lipoprotein (HDL) subclass 3 was completely independent of LDL receptors. Thus, HDL3 enhanced responses of both normal and familial hypercholesterolemia lymphocytes in an equivalent concentration-dependent manner; this effect was not altered by reductive methylation of HDL3. One function of lipoproteins in this system may be the provision of fatty acids since oleic and linoleic acids enhanced DNA synthesis by both normal and familial hypercholesterolemia lymphocytes in the absence of lipoproteins. These results indicate that lipoproteins may provide fatty acids necessary for optimal proliferation of human lymphocytes by both LDL receptor-mediated and LDL receptor-independent interactions.  相似文献   

17.
The hypothesis that, in the case of clonal or low-density cultures, cells which do not readily proliferate are those that do not produce an extracellular matrix (ECM), while those that proliferate actively are cells that have retained their ability to produce it, has been tested using low-density vascular endothelial cell cultures maintained on either plastic or ECM-coated dishes and exposed to various combinations of media and sera. Proliferation of low-density vascular endothelial cell cultures seeded on plastic and exposed to DMEM, RPMI-1640, or medium 199 plus thymidine is a function of the batch of calf serum used to supplement the various media. In all three cases, such cultures proliferated at a slow rate and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) greatly accelerated their proliferation. In contrast, when similar cultures were seeded on ECM-coated dishes, they actively proliferated regardless of the batch of calf serum to which they were exposed. FGF was no longer required in order for cultures to become confluent. In the case of cultures exposed to RPMI-1640 or medium 199 plus thymidine, it was even toxic. When cultures were exposed to either medium 199 or Waymouth medium, cells did not proliferate, regardless of the substrate (either plastic or ECM) upon which they were maintained and of the batch of serum to which they were exposed. Addition of FGF to such media had no effect. It is therefore likely that nutrient limitations in both of these media restrict the ability of low-density vascular endothelial cells to respond to the mitogenic stimuli provided by either serum or FGF. These restrictions cannot be relieved by maintaining cells on ECM-coated dishes, and modifications of the nutrient composition of both media is required in order to allow cells to respond to either FGF or serum when maintained on plastic or to serum alone when maintained on ECM. These results suggest that, when low-density cell cultures are maintained on plastic and exposed to an adequate medium, their proliferation will be a function of both serum and FGF. When maintained on ECM, their proliferation will depend only on serum. It is therefore possible that the inability of serum to stimulate optimal cell proliferation when cells are maintained on plastic results from an inability of the cells to produce an ECM, and that FGF could induce such production.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Primary cultures of rat vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells were developed as models to study xenobiotic-induced cytotoxicity. Endothelial and smooth muscle cells were isolated by enzymatic digestion and mechanical dissociation of rat thoracic aortae. Optimal cell growth and minimal fibroblast contamination in cultures of both cell types were obtained in Medium 199 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. Cultured cells were characterized by distinctive morphologic features and growth patterns. Intercellular endothelial cell junctions were selectively stained with silver nitrate. Endothelial cells also exhibited a nonthrombogenic surface, as reflected by platelet-binding studies. Confluent cultures of smooth muscle cells, but not endothelial cells, contracted in response to norepinephrine (10 μM). Cultures of both cell types were exposed to acrolein (2, 5 or 50 ppm), an environmental pollutant, for 4 24 h. Morphologic damage, lactate dehydrogenase release, and cellular thiol content were used as indices of cytotoxicity. Acrolein-induced enzyme leakage and morpholgic alterations were dose- and time-dependent and more pronounced in cultures of smooth muscle cells than in endothelial cells. The total thiol content of endothelial cells exposed to acrolein (50 ppm) for 24 h was not significantly different from that of respective controls. In contrast, the content of treated smooth muscle cells was higher than that of controls. These observations show that primary cultures of vascular cells provide a useful model to evaluate xenobiotic-induced cytotoxicity. The information obtained using a cell culture system may be complemented by the use of other in vivo and in vitro models to determine the mechanisms by which xenobiotics cause vascular cell injury.  相似文献   

19.
Growth factor responses of human arterial endothelial cells in vitro   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary Human arterial endothelial cells were cultured in vitro for up to 40 cumulative population doublings. Culture conditions similar to those required for long-term propagation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells were employed. These included fibronectin-coated culture vessels, 5 to 20% fetal bovine serum, endothelial cell growth factor, and heparin. Thoracic aorta endothelial cells were larger than iliac artery endothelial cells. Both cell types stained positively for Factor VIII antigen by immunofluorescence. A decrease in confluent density as a function of population doubling level was correlated with the appearance of large, senescent cells in the cultures. Serum growth factors to which the arterial endothelial cells responded included insulin, transferrin, epidermal growth factor, thrombin, and somatomedins. The effect of thrombin did not require the availabilty of the active site of the protease. The effect of the somatomedins was only seen in the presence of heparin. Neither platelet-derived growth factor nor hydrocortisone induced arteiral endothelial cell proliferation. These growth factor responses were also observed on the part of human umbilical vein endothelial cells. This work was supported in part by Public Health Service grants HL01030, HL01734, and AG00599.  相似文献   

20.
Bovine adrenal and brain cortex and corpus luteum-derived capillary endothelial cells have been established in culture, taking advantage of their ability to proliferate at clonal density when maintained on extracellular matrix (ECM) coated dishes in the presence of serum supplemented medium. All three cell types formed at confluency a monolayer of small, tightly packed, contact inhibited cells that express factor VIII related antigen. Their proliferative response to basic and acidic FGF when cells were maintained on plastic and exposed to serum supplemented medium was similar to that previously reported for endothelial cells derived from large vessels, with acidic FGF being 30-fold less potent than basic FGF. Their requirement for high density lipoproteins and transferrin in order to proliferate actively when maintained on ECM-coated dishes and exposed to serum-free conditions was also similar to that previously reported for endothelial cells derived from large vessels. Heparin strongly reduced the proliferative response of capillary endothelial cells to either basic or acidic FGF, as well as their response to serum alone, regardless of whether cells were maintained on plastic or on ECM-coated dishes. The present data indicate that bovine endothelial cells derived from large or small vessels are indistinguishable in so far as their response to growth factors, plasma factors, and substrata are concerned.  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