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Fractionation and enrichment of oligodendrocytes from developing human brain

✍ Scribed by W.E. Grever; S.-C. Zhang; B. Ge; I.D. Duncan


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
499 KB
Volume
57
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-4012

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✦ Synopsis


Enriched cultures of human oligodendrocytes were obtained from fetal brain specimens between 16 and 21 gestational weeks. Brain cells were separated over a Percoll density gradient and collected as two fractions with initial relative densities of approximately 1.035 g/ml and 1.102 g/ml, for fractions 1 and 2, respectively. After separation, 58.3 and 67.7% of the cells in fractions 1 and 2, respectively, were labeled by the antibody O4 that recognizes immature oligodendrocytes. A total of 15.5 and 29.4% of the cells in fractions 1 and 2, respectively, were positive for tubulin-␀ III , a marker for neurons but none of the freshly isolated cells were positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), a protein associated with astrocytes in the central nervous system. When the fractionated cells were cultured on poly-ornithine coated coverslips for 3 days and processed for immunocytochemistry, the percentage of O4 Ψ‰ oligodendrocytes decreased to less than 4% whereas GFAP Ψ‰ cells increased to 1.8 and 12.4% for fractions 1 and 2 respectively. The percentage of tubulin-␀ III Ψ‰ cells increased to 46 and 61% in cultures from the two Percoll fractions. This increase is probably due to the decrease in the number of oligodendrocytes. To avoid the loss of oligodendrocytes, cells were cultured as free-floating aggregates in the presence of 20 ng/ml of fibroblast growth factor-2 for 2 weeks. The resultant cultures became enriched for oligodendrocytes as demonstrated by cellular morphology and by positive O4 labeling. The method described here provides a means of obtaining enriched cultures of immature human oligodendrocytes for developmental and transplantation studies.


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