Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9038909 Toxicology in Vitro 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Murine embryonic stem (mES) cells have been used to evaluate cytotoxicity and developmental injury following exposure to embryotoxic agents. However, maintaining a homogeneous population of undifferentiated mES cells for this purpose has been complicated by the need for continuous co-culture with murine embryonic fibroblast (mEF) cells or limited passaging on plastic surfaces coated with gelatin. Here, we compare the synthetic basement membrane Matrigel™ with 0.1% gelatin substratum for feeder-free propagation of undifferentiated mES cells. Biomarkers of pluripotentiality, chromosome number, caspase-3 expression, and cardiomyocyte differentiation were monitored for mES cells cultured on Matrigel™ or 0.1% gelatin up to passage 7 (P7). Our results suggest that choice of substratum had no significant effect on population doubling time, cell viability, stage-specific embryonic antigen-1 (SSEA-1) expression, or early passage formation of beating cardiomyocytes (all P ⩾ 0.09). In other comparisons, however, Matrigel™ supported significantly higher synthesis of alkaline phosphatase (7.7 × 10−3 ± 0.8 vs 6.6 × 10−3 ± 0.8 units/liter/cell, respectively, P = 0.012), overall expression of activated caspase-3 following exposure to 5, 10, 50, 100 and 500 parts per billion (ppb) sodium arsenite (P < 0.0001), and percent development to beating cardiomyocytes at P7 (P = 0.01). Together, our findings suggest that Matrigel™ shows promise as a substrate for feeder-free propagation of undifferentiated mES cells for embryotoxicity endpoints.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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