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Quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains

Morphological and functional characterizations of cultured microglia are essential for the improved understanding of their roles in neuronal health and disease. Although some studies (phenotype analysis, phagocytosis) can be carried out in mixed or microglia-enriched cultures, in others (gene expres...

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Autores principales: Dulka, Karolina, Nacsa, Kálmán, Lajkó, Noémi, Gulya, Karoly
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8019997/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33842918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ibneur.2021.01.007
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author Dulka, Karolina
Nacsa, Kálmán
Lajkó, Noémi
Gulya, Karoly
author_facet Dulka, Karolina
Nacsa, Kálmán
Lajkó, Noémi
Gulya, Karoly
author_sort Dulka, Karolina
collection PubMed
description Morphological and functional characterizations of cultured microglia are essential for the improved understanding of their roles in neuronal health and disease. Although some studies (phenotype analysis, phagocytosis) can be carried out in mixed or microglia-enriched cultures, in others (gene expression) pure microglia must be used. If the use of genetically modified microglial cells is not feasible, isolation of resident microglia from nervous tissue must be carried out. In this study, mixed primary cultures were established from the forebrains of newborn rats. Secondary microglia-enriched cultures were then prepared by shaking off these cells from the primary cultures, which were subsequently used to establish tertiary cultures by further shaking off the easily detachable microglia. The composition of these cultures was quantitatively analyzed by immunocytochemistry of microglia-, astrocyte-, oligodendrocyte- and neuron-specific markers to determine yield and purity. Microglia were quantitatively characterized regarding morphological and proliferation aspects. Secondary and tertiary cultures typically exhibited 73.3% ± 17.8% and 93.1% ± 6.0% purity for microglia, respectively, although the total number of microglia in the latter was much smaller. One in seven attempts of culturing the tertiary cultures had ~99% purity for microglia. The overall yield from the number of cells plated at DIV0 to the Iba1-positive microglia in tertiary cultures was ~1%. Astrocytic and neuronal contamination progressively decreased during subcloning, while oligodendrocytes were found sporadically throughout culturing. Although the tertiary microglia cultures had a low yield, they produced consistently high purity for microglia; after validation, such cultures are suitable for purity-sensitive functional screenings (gene/protein expression).
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spelling pubmed-80199972021-04-08 Quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains Dulka, Karolina Nacsa, Kálmán Lajkó, Noémi Gulya, Karoly IBRO Neurosci Rep Research Paper Morphological and functional characterizations of cultured microglia are essential for the improved understanding of their roles in neuronal health and disease. Although some studies (phenotype analysis, phagocytosis) can be carried out in mixed or microglia-enriched cultures, in others (gene expression) pure microglia must be used. If the use of genetically modified microglial cells is not feasible, isolation of resident microglia from nervous tissue must be carried out. In this study, mixed primary cultures were established from the forebrains of newborn rats. Secondary microglia-enriched cultures were then prepared by shaking off these cells from the primary cultures, which were subsequently used to establish tertiary cultures by further shaking off the easily detachable microglia. The composition of these cultures was quantitatively analyzed by immunocytochemistry of microglia-, astrocyte-, oligodendrocyte- and neuron-specific markers to determine yield and purity. Microglia were quantitatively characterized regarding morphological and proliferation aspects. Secondary and tertiary cultures typically exhibited 73.3% ± 17.8% and 93.1% ± 6.0% purity for microglia, respectively, although the total number of microglia in the latter was much smaller. One in seven attempts of culturing the tertiary cultures had ~99% purity for microglia. The overall yield from the number of cells plated at DIV0 to the Iba1-positive microglia in tertiary cultures was ~1%. Astrocytic and neuronal contamination progressively decreased during subcloning, while oligodendrocytes were found sporadically throughout culturing. Although the tertiary microglia cultures had a low yield, they produced consistently high purity for microglia; after validation, such cultures are suitable for purity-sensitive functional screenings (gene/protein expression). Elsevier 2021-02-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8019997/ /pubmed/33842918 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ibneur.2021.01.007 Text en © 2021 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Dulka, Karolina
Nacsa, Kálmán
Lajkó, Noémi
Gulya, Karoly
Quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains
title Quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains
title_full Quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains
title_fullStr Quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains
title_short Quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains
title_sort quantitative morphometric and cell-type-specific population analysis of microglia-enriched cultures subcloned to high purity from newborn rat brains
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8019997/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33842918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ibneur.2021.01.007
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