Publication | Open Access
Spheroidal aggregate culture of rat liver cells: histotypic reorganization, biomatrix deposition, and maintenance of functional activities.
515
Citations
37
References
1985
Year
PathologyCell CultureCell ProliferationCytoskeletonCell GrowthCholangiocyte BiologyCholangiopathiesCellular PhysiologyRat Liver CellsSpheroidal Aggregate CultureMatrix BiologyHealth SciencesLiver PhysiologyHistopathologyAggregate SurfaceMorphogenesisCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyHepatologySpheroidal AggregatesHuman TissueBiomatrix DepositionTissue CultureLiverMedicineAlbumin SecretionExtracellular Matrix
Immunofluorescence microscopy of frozen spheroid sections using antibodies to cytoskeletal and extracellular matrix proteins revealed sorting of three cell types, while albumin secretion and tyrosine aminotransferase induction assays confirmed maintenance of hepatocyte functions. New.
Liver cells isolated from newborn rats and seeded on a non-adherent plastic substratum were found to spontaneously re-aggregate and to form, within a few days, spheroidal aggregates that eventually reached a plateaued diameter of 150-175 micron. Analyses on frozen sections from these spheroids by immunofluorescence microscopy using antibodies to various cytoskeletal elements and extracellular matrix components revealed a sorting out and a histotypic reorganization of three major cell types. A first type consisted of cells that segregated out on the aggregate surface forming a monolayer cell lining; a second type was identified as hepatocytes that regrouped in small islands often defining a central lumen; and a third group of cells reorganized into bile duct-like structures. This intercellular organization in the aggregates was paralleled by the accumulation of extracellular matrix components (laminin, fibronectin, and collagen) and their deposition following a specific pattern around each cell population structure. Determinations of albumin secretion and tyrosine aminotransferase induction by dexamethasone and glucagon at various times after the initiation of the cultures revealed a maintenance of the hepatocyte-differentiated functions for at least up to 2 mo at the levels measured at 3-5 d. It is concluded that cells dispersed as single cells from newborn rat liver conserve in part the necessary information to reconstruct a proper three-dimensional cyto-architecture and that the microenvironment so generated most likely represents a basic requirement for the optimal functioning of these differentiated cells.
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