The introduction of viral transforming genes into mammalian cells has been used in establishing cultures of unlimited lifespan. Although Müller cells, the predominant glial cells in the mammalian retina, have been isolated using a variety of techniques, most of these cultures have limited capacity for cell division and are often contaminated by other cell types especially astrocytes, endothelial cells and microglial cells. We have established pure cultures of retinal cells which express Müller cell characteristics and exhibit unlimited growth in vitro. We now report the techniques involved in the propagation and characterization of these cultures. Mixed retinal cultures isolated from dystrophic rat retinas were infected with defective retroviruses coding for human papillomavirus (HPV) type 16 E6 and E7 proteins. The disabled viral constructs also contained the neomycin gene allowing selection of the cultures using Geneticin, a neomycin analogue. Pure cultures were then obtained from Geneticin-selected populations by limiting end-dilution techniques. The expression of the HPV-16 E6/E7 genes in the transfected cell line was established using an HPV-16 E6/E7 PCR product to probe Northern blots. Cloned cells were found to be highly reactive for Müller cell markers including S-100, carbonic anhydrase-C, cellular retinaldehyde binding protein, and glial fibrillary acidic protein but not for glutamine synthetase. Ultrastructural studies showed stacks of cells with long elaborate processes, short microvilli, coated pits, cytoplasmic filaments, abundant perinuclear rough endoplasmic reticulum, and smooth endoplasmic reticulum extending to the cell processes. Growth patterns of late passage cells (> 50 passages) showed a lag phase of 48 hr followed by exponential growth extending past visual confluence at day 5. Since the cultures have undergone more than 240 population doublings, they can be characterized as a continuous cell line with unlimited lifespan. The HPV-16 E6/E7 transfected Müller cell line may prove useful in studies requiring abundant and pure cultures of Müller cells.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/exer.1996.0230 | DOI Listing |
Arch Med Res
July 2019
Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Chronic inflammatory liver disease with an acute deterioration of liver function is named acute-on-chronic inflammation and could be regulated by the metabolic impairments related to the liver dysfunction. In this way, the experimental cholestasis model is excellent for studying metabolism in both types of inflammatory responses. Along the evolution of this model, the rats develop biliary fibrosis and an acute-on-chronic decompensation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCells
June 2019
Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Complutense University of Madrid, 28040 Madrid, Spain.
Portal hypertension is a common complication of liver disease, either acute or chronic. Consequently, in chronic liver disease, such as the hypertensive mesenteric venous pathology, the coexisting inflammatory response is classically characterized by the splanchnic blood circulation. However, a vascular lymphatic pathology is produced simultaneously with the splanchnic arterio-venous impairments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Res Hepatol Gastroenterol
October 2019
Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Complutense University of Madrid, 28040 Madrid, Spain. Electronic address:
Introduction: Splanchnic mast cells increase in chronic liver and in acute-on-chronic liver diseases. We administered Ketotifen, a mast cell stabilizer, and measured the mast cells in the splanchnic organs of cholestatic rats.
Material And Methods: These groups were studied: sham-operated rats (S; n = 15), untreated microsurgical cholestasic rats (C; n = 20) and rats treated with Ketotifen: early (SK-e; n = 20 and CKe; n = 18), and late (SK-l; n = 15 and CK-l; n = 14).
Inflamm Res
February 2019
Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Complutense University of Madrid, Plaza de Ramón y Cajal s.n., 28040, Madrid, Spain.
Background: In mammals, inflammation is required for wound repair and tumorigenesis. However, the events that lead to inflammation, particularly in non-healing wounds and cancer, are only partly understood.
Findings: Mast cells, due to their great plasticity, could orchestrate the inflammatory responses inducing the expression of extraembryonic programs of normal and pathological tissue formation.
Inflamm Res
February 2018
Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Complutense University of Madrid, Plaza de Ramón y Cajal s.n., 28040, Madrid, Spain.
The inflammatory response expressed after wound healing would be the recapitulation of systemic extra-embryonic functions, which would focus on the interstitium of the injured tissue. In the injured tissue, mast cells, provided for a great functional heterogeneity, could play the leading role in the re-expression of extra-embryonic functions, i.e.
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