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Query: EC:3.4.24.3 (
collagenase
)
18,340
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cultures of primary human cementum-derived cells (HCDCs) were established from healthy premolar teeth extracted for orthodontic reasons. Cementum was manually dissected, fragmented, and digested twice with
collagenase
. Following a thorough wash to remove liberated cells, the remaining cementum fragments were plated in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium/
F12
medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum. Discrete colonies that contained cells exhibiting fibroblast-like morphology were visible after 14-21 days of culture. When the colonies became sufficiently large, cells from individual colonies were isolated and subcultured. Cementum-derived cells exhibited low levels or no alkaline phosphatase activity and mineralized in vitro to a lesser degree than human periodontal ligament (PDL) cells and human bone marrow stromal cell (BMSC) cultures. To study differentiation capacities of HCDCs, cells were attached to hydroxyapatite/tricalcium phosphate ceramic and transplanted subcutaneously into immunodeficient mice. The transplants were harvested 3, 6, and 8 weeks after transplantation and evaluated histologically. In human BMSC transplants, new bone tissue was formed with a prominent osteoblastic layer and osteocytes embedded in mineralized bone matrix. No osseous tissue was formed by PDL cells. Of six single colony-derived strains of HCDCs tested, three formed a bone-like tissue that featured osteocyte/cementocyte-like cells embedded within a mineralized matrix and which was lined with a layer of cells, although they were somewhat more elongated than osteoblasts. These results show that cells from normal human cementum can be isolated and expanded in vitro. Furthermore, these cells are capable of differentiating and forming mineralized tissue when transplanted into immunodeficient mice.
...
PMID:Normal human cementum-derived cells: isolation, clonal expansion, and in vitro and in vivo characterization. 978 43
Luteal cells were isolated from mid-luteal heifer ovaries by
collagenase
digestion. Cells were cultured with DMEM/Ham's
F12
medium in serum pre-treated plastic culture dishes for periods of up to 11 days. As beta-carotene is almost completely insoluble in all polar solvents, it was added to cultures in either dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO), tetrahydrofuran (THF) or as high-density lipoprotein (HDL) containing high or low beta-carotene concentrations. Medium was replaced after 24 h, thereafter medium was changed every 48 h. Treatment of cells with DMSO alone or with beta-carotene (5 micromol/l) in DMSO both resulted in significant (P<0.01) stimulation of progesterone production. beta-Carotene (5 micromol/l) in THF did not alter progesterone production but 50 micromol/l beta-carotene in THF resulted in significant inhibition (P<0.02) of progesterone production on days 3 and 7. Cultures were also supplemented with bovine HDL preparations containing equal concentrations of cholesterol (25 microg/ml) but high or low beta-carotene (12.4 or 0.44 microg/mg of cholesterol). Both HDL preparations significantly stimulated progesterone production (P<0. 001) but the high beta-carotene HDL was significantly (P<0.02) more effective than the low beta-carotene HDL. However, when given together with bovine luteinizing hormone (bLH) or dibutyryl cAMP (dbcAMP), the high beta-carotene HDL stimulated progesterone production less than did the low HDL (P<0.01). Uptake and depletion of beta-carotene by luteal cells were also examined in culture. beta-Carotene supplementation increased luteal cell beta-carotene from an initial level of 373 ng per 10(6) cells to 2030 ng per 10(6) cells by day 6. In contrast, the levels in control cells decreased to 14% of starting values during the same period. Cells treated with HDL containing high beta-carotene on day 1 or days 1 and 3 were then incubated with or without bLH or dbcAMP for a further 2 days to investigate the effect of bLH and dbcAMP on depletion of beta-carotene by luteal cells. beta-Carotene depletion in the luteal cells was significantly higher (P<0.05) in LH- and dbcAMP-treated cells than in the control cells in both groups. These results indicate that the use of solvents such as DMSO or THF may have undesirable effects due to alteration of cell membrane permeability. Supplementation with bLH or dbcAMP may increase the metabolism of beta-carotene in luteal cells. bLH or dbcAMP together with high beta-carotene HDL may, when combined with the effect of increased beta-carotene metabolism, give less stimulation than with low beta-carotene HDL.
...
PMID:Effects of high density lipoprotein containing high or low beta-carotene concentrations on progesterone production and beta-carotene uptake and depletion by bovine luteal cells. 1092 28
The procedures recently developed in our laboratory to observe three-dimensional structures of cell organelles in thick biological specimens by means of high voltage electron microscopy are reviewed. Thick biological specimens such as whole mount cultured cells seeded and grown on grid meshes in culture vessels or thick sections cut from embedded tissues and stained by histochemical reactions can be readily observed three-dimensionally by high voltage transmission electron microscopy at 400-1000kV. Cultured cells used were both primary cultures from animal tissues and established cell lines maintained in our laboratory. The livers of adult Wistar rats were isolated by
collagenase
perfusion, and hepatocytes were suspended in a Leibovitz medium and seeded on formval coated gold grid meshes in Petri dishes, incubated in a CO(2) incubator in a humidified atmosphere containing 5% CO(2) in air at 37 degrees C for a few days. Established cell lines, CHO-K1 cells, were cultured in Ham's
F12
medium, while HeLa cells were cultured in Eagle's MEM under the same condition. Some of the cells were cultured under experimental conditions such as hepatocyte culture in the medium containing peroxisome proliferating agents such as clofibrate or bezafibrate and some of them were labeled with (3)H-thymidine, (3)H-uridine, (3)H-labeled precursors and (14)C-bezafibrate. Also some cells were incubated in medium containing HRP to induce pinocytosis. All the whole mount cultured cells on grid meshes were prefixed in buffered 2.5% glutaraldehyde, stained with various histochemical reactions and postfixed in 1% osmium tetroxide. The histochemical reactions used were glucose-6-phosphatase (G-6-Pase), thiamine pyrophosphatase (TPPase), cytochrome oxidase, acid phosphatase (AcPase), DAB, ZIO, PA-TCH-SP reactions and radioautography was performed after labeling with radiolabeled compounds. The whole mount cultured cells were dried in a critical point dryer and were observed with JEOL JEM-4000EX or Hitachi H-1250M high voltage electron microscopes at 400-1000kV. By tilting the specimens' stereo-pair micrographs were recorded and they were observed with stereoscopes. Rat liver, mouse intestine and pancreas tissues, fixed and stained as above, were embedded in Epoxy resin, thick sectioned at 1-2 microm and were observed as for the whole mount cultured cells at 1000kV. Stereo-pairs were further analyzed with an image analyzer JEOL JIM-5000 (JEOL, Tokyo, Japan), producing two contour lines plotted from the micrographs at a thickness of 0.2 microm and were observed with anaglyph type glasses, demonstrating the depth or heights of respective cell organelles. The results show that whole mount cultured cells and thick sections stained with histochemical reactions reveal cell organelles corresponding to marker enzymes, such as G-6-Pase in endoplasmic reticulum, TPPase and ZIO in Golgi apparatus, cytochrome oxidase in mitochondria, AcPase in lysosomes, DAB in peroxisomes and pinocytotic vesicles, PA-TCH-SP in secretory granules, (3)H-thymidine and (3)H-uridine in nuclei, (3)H-animo acids in endoplasmic reticulum and secretory granules, (14)C-bezafibrate around ER and peroxisomes. The ultrastructure of these cell organelles as well as the structural relationship between them can be demonstrated three-dimensionally with stereo-pair images. Overall, these procedures are useful for analyzing stereologically the ultrastructure of cell organelles in cells and tissues.
...
PMID:Three-dimensional high voltage electron microscopy of thick biological specimens. 1107 Mar 59
Experiments were conducted to examine the effect of cyclodextrin-encapsulated beta-carotene on basal or cholesterol (cyclodextrin-encapsulated), LH and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP)-stimulated progesterone production by bovine corpus luteum cells isolated from mid-luteal heifer ovaries by
collagenase
digestion. Cells were cultured with serum-free DMEM/Ham's
F12
medium in serum pre-treated plastic culture dishes for periods of up to 11 days. Medium was replaced after 24h and thereafter every 48 h. Beta-carotene was added to cultures in a carrier molecule, dimethyl-beta-cyclodextrin, to facilitate dissolution. All treatments were started on day 3 of culture. Treatment of cells with 1 or 2 micromol/l beta-carotene resulted in sharp inhibition of progesterone production. On the contrary, treatment of cells with 0.1 micromol/l beta-carotene resulted in significant stimulation (P<0.05) of both basal and cholesterol-stimulated progesterone secretion. The effect of beta-carotene on LH or dbcAMP-stimulated progesterone production was also examined. Treatment of cells with LH or dbcAMP always resulted in stimulation of progesterone secretion (P<0.001). However, cells treated with LH plus beta-carotene or dbcAMP plus beta-carotene both produced significantly (P<0.01) less progesterone relative to those cells treated with LH or dbcAMP alone on days 7, 9 and 11 of culture. These results indicate that beta-carotene can enhance luteal steroidogenesis when present at low concentrations but is inhibitory at higher concentrations and that encapsulation of beta-carotene in cyclodextrin is an effective method of supplying it to cells in culture.
...
PMID:Effect of cyclodextrin-encapsulated beta-carotene on progesterone production by bovine luteal cells. 1112 92
The present study determined whether porcine leptin can alter the lipolytic rate in porcine adipocytes produced in vitro. The stromal-vascular cell fraction of neonatal subcutaneous adipose tissue was isolated by
collagenase
digestion, filtration, and subsequent centrifugation. These stromal-vascular cells were seeded on 25-cm2 tissue culture flasks and proliferated to confluency in 10% fetal bovine serum in DMEM/
F12
(50:50). Cultures were differentiated using 2% pig serum + 10 mM isobutyl methylxanthine + 1 microM dexamethasone for 48 h. This medium was replaced with 5% pig serum + 1 microM insulin to promote lipid filling of adipocytes for 7 d. Adipocyte-containing cultures were incubated overnight in serum-free medium and then used for experiments. Acute experiments assessed lipolysis in cultures exposed to porcine leptin (0 to 1,000 ng/mL medium) for 2 h. Chronic experiments used cultures incubated with 100 ng porcine leptin/mL of medium for 72 h prior to lipolysis measurements. Direct effects of leptin were examined by incubating cultures in DMEM/
F12
, 25 mM HEPES, 3% bovine serum albumin, 20 mU of adenosine deaminase/mL of medium in the presence of 0 to 1,000 ng of porcine leptin/mL of medium. Indirect effects of leptin were examined using the same incubation medium but also supplemented with 1 microM isoproterenol +/- 10 nM insulin in the presence of 0 to 1,000 ng of porcine leptin/mL of medium. Media glycerol concentration was measured at the end of 2-h incubations. Acute leptin exposure induced up to a 76% increase in lipolysis (P < 0.05) but had no effect on insulin's inhibition of lipolysis. Chronic exposure to leptin produced up to a 56% increase in lipolysis (P < 0.05) and reduced insulin's inhibition ofisoproterenol-stimulated lipolysis by up to 31% (P < 0.05). These data demonstrate leptin functions to promote the partitioning of energy away from lipid accretion within porcine adipose tissue by promoting lipolysis directly and indirectly by reducing insulin-mediated inhibition of lipolysis.
...
PMID:Porcine leptin alters insulin inhibition of lipolysis in porcine adipocytes in vitro. 1126 25
Fetal bovine serum has commonly been used to expand the population of keratocytes in culture. Tissue extracts, however, have also been used to grow other cell types. We prepared a DMEM/
F12
extract of corneal stroma and compared the growth and morphology of
collagenase
-isolated keratocytes cultured in DMEM/
F12
, or DMEM/
F12
containing either stromal extract or fetal bovine serum. Cell proliferation was measured by 3H-thymidine and BrdU incorporation as well as by DNA quantitation. The extract was fractionated by gel filtration. Cell morphology was assessed by phase-contrast microscopy. Culture in both extract and serum stimulated keratocytes to proliferate, but keratocytes cultured in the extract grew more slowly due to a longer cell cycle and to a lower final density because of greater sensitivity to contact inhibition. Keratocytes cultured in serum became fibroblastic while those cultured in extract retained the dendritic morphology of quiescent keratocytes. The stimulating factors in the corneal extract were more sensitive to heat inactivation and of higher molecular weight than the stimulating factors in serum. These results indicate that the mitogenic activity in extract and serum are different and that the phenotypes resulting from growth in serum and extract are also different. Keratocytes cultured at low cell densities in the corneal extract may mimic keratocyte activation, an initial and crucial event for keratocytes during the corneal wound healing process.
...
PMID:Isolation of a putative keratocyte activating factor from the corneal stroma. 1290 59
This study was designed to develop a culture system from the stromal-vascular fraction of chicken adipose tissue that can be used to characterize hormones that promote preadipocyte differentiation. Abdominal adipose tissue was excised from 2 to 4-week-old male broilers (Gallus domesticus) by sterile dissection. The stromal-vascular cell fraction from the adipose tissue was isolated by
collagenase
digestion, filtration, and subsequent centrifugation. These preadipocytes were seeded in six well culture plates and proliferated to confluency in 10% fetal bovine serum in DMEM/
F12
(50:50) medium. At confluency, experiments were initiated to determine hormonal requirements for differentiation. Insulin (100 nM) stimulated expression of citrate lyase and sn-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase relative to lactate dehydrogenase in the presence of 2.5% chicken serum (P<0.05), but not with 10% chicken serum (P>0.05). Triiodothyronine (T(3), 1 nM) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (100 ng/ml) had no effect on differentiation. Dexamethasone (Dex, 1 microM) stimulated differentiation in 2.5 or 10% chicken serum (P<0.05). Insulin, Dex and 2.5% chicken serum stimulated enzymatic differentiation to the extent of 10% chicken serum, but heparin (10 U/ml) addition, in combination with insulin and Dex was necessary to stimulate lipid filling of adipocytes.
...
PMID:Hormonal regulation of postnatal chicken preadipocyte differentiation in vitro. 1452 50
The present study examined whether recombinant porcine leptin alters lipid synthesis in porcine adipocytes. The stromal-vascular cell fraction of neonatal pig subcutaneous adipose tissue was isolated by
collagenase
digestion, filtration, and subsequent centrifugation. These cells were seeded on 25-cm2 tissue culture flasks and proliferated to confluency in 10% (vol/vol) fetal bovine serum in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium/
F12
(DMEM/
F12
, 50:50). Cultures were differentiated using 2.5% pig serum (vol/vol), 10 nM insulin, 100 nM hydrocortisone. After 7 d of lipid filling, cultures were washed free of this medium, incubated overnight in DMEM/
F12
containing 2% pig serum (vol/vol), and then used for experiments. Acute experiments assessed U-(14)C-glucose or 1-(14)C-palmitate metabolism in cultures exposed to porcine leptin (0 to 1,000 ng/mL medium) for 4 h. Chronic experiments used cultures incubated with 0 to 1,000 ng porcine leptin/mL medium for 44 h before measurements of U-(14)C-glucose and 1-(14)C-palmitate oxidation and incorporation into lipid. Another experiment examined whether chronic leptin treatment alters insulin responsiveness by including insulin (10 nM) with incubations containing leptin. Leptin had no acute effects on glucose oxidation or conversion to lipid (P > 0.05). Acute leptin treatment decreased palmitate incorporation into lipids up to 45% (P < 0.05). Chronic leptin exposure decreased glucose oxidation (21%), total lipid synthesis (18%), and fatty acid synthesis (23%) at 100 ng/mL medium (P < 0.05). Insulin increased rates of glucose oxidation, total lipid, and fatty acid synthesis (P < 0.05); however, chronic exposure to 10 ng leptin/mL medium decreased the effectiveness of 10 nM insulin to affect these measures of glucose metabolism by approximately 18 to 46% (P < 0.05). Higher concentrations of leptin inhibited all effects of insulin on glucose metabolism (P < 0.05). Chronic exposure to leptin increased palmitate oxidation by 36% (P < 0.05). Chronic leptin exposure decreased palmitate incorporation into total lipids by 40% at 100 ng/mL medium (P < 0.05). Lipoprotein lipase activity was not affected (P > 0.05) by leptin. These data indicate that leptin functions to promote partitioning of energy away from lipid accretion within porcine adipose tissue by inhibiting glucose oxidation and lipogenesis indirectly, by decreasing insulin-mediated stimulation of lipogenesis, and by stimulating fatty acid oxidation while inhibiting fatty acid esterification.
...
PMID:Porcine leptin inhibits lipogenesis in porcine adipocytes. 1467 56
Human breast cancer primary cultures are useful tools for the study of several aspects of cancer biology, including the effects of chemotherapy and acute gene expression in response to different hormonal/chemotherapy treatments. The present study reports the conditions for primary culture of breast cancer samples from untreated patients and the most effective collagenization method to dissociate human samples consisting in an overnight incubation with 1 mg/ml types II or IV
collagenase
and further incubation in DMEM:
F12
(1:1) medium supplemented with glutamine, bovine insulin, penicillin-streptomycin, HEPES, estradiol, cortisol (F), tri-iodothyronine (T(3)), transferrine (TR), and 10% fetal calf serum (FCS). These conditions proved to be appropriate for both primary culture and the development of stable cell lines. Of the seven cell lines obtained, three fast growing and estrogen receptor (ER)+/progesterone receptor (PgR)+/EGF receptor (EGFR)+ have been characterized. The cells are able to grow both in soft agar and in nude mice, and express cytokeratins, all parameters characteristic of malignant epithelial cell lines. The cells also exhibit an increased proliferation rate in the presence of estradiol, progesterone, and EGF, suggesting the presence of the corresponding receptors. The mRNA expression of type alpha- and beta-ER as well as EGFR, was confirmed by RT-PCR. In conclusion, the novel cell lines described, arose from primary tumors and are sensitive to estradiol, progesterone, and EGF. This not only expands the repertoire of breast cancer cells available as potentially useful tools for examining most parameters in breast cancer "in vitro", but also provides unique new models to explore the complex regulation by steroids as well as growth factors in such cells.
...
PMID:Three novel hormone-responsive cell lines derived from primary human breast carcinomas: functional characterization. 1509 93
A tissue-culture system in which cells retain defined ultrastructural and functional characteristics was established to provide a basis for functional investigations of the epididymal duct in the cat. A widely used culture protocol for rat epididymal epithelium was used as a starting point and subsequently modified. The cellular population of the cat's epididymal epithelium was isolated by successive
collagenase
and trypsin digestion. A high yield of isolated cells obtained with good viability, were cultured in DMEM/
F12
medium supplemented with foetal bovine serum, in absence or in presence of additional dihydrotestosterone (1 nM). The plated primary cultures reached confluence within 5-8 days, producing a monolayer of cohesive cells. Samples taken after 6 days in culture were processed for transmission and scanning electron microscopies. Immunocytochemical staining was used to estimate the purity of the epithelial cell population in the monolayers. The cell cultures displayed several functional traits of in vivo epithelia, including [35S] hypotaurine and [35S] taurine production. These results demonstrate that primary cultures of epididymal epithelial cells isolated from sexually mature cats maintain several differentiated characteristics of the intact organ and therefore provide a valuable system for the study of epididymal epithelial cell functions, metabolic activities and their regulation in cats.
...
PMID:Isolation, culture and characteristics of epididymal epithelial cells from adult cats. 1590 91
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