3D Culture Histology Cryosectioned Well Insert Technology Preserves the Structural Relationship between Cells and Biomaterials for Time-Lapse Analysis of 3D Cultures.
André M CharbonneauAhmed Al-SamadiTuula SaloSimon D TranPublished in: Biotechnology journal (2019)
When performing histology of softer biomaterials, aspiration disrupts the cellular and molecular location information. This study aims to develop a cryosectionable well insert able to preserve the biomaterial and cell's original 3D conformation from the well to histology analysis. The well insert is composed of a paraffin-coated gelatine pill. Within the coated capsule, the human epithelial cell line (NS-SV-AC) is cultured in Matrigel, GrowDex, Myogel, Myogel + GrowDex, or cell culture media for 14 days. At 0 and 14 days, the samples are frozen in liquid nitrogen and cryotome is used to create sections. The slides are stained by Sirius Red and immunohistochemistry using antibodies human collagens I-V and human Ki-67. Sirius Red shows pink shades of biomaterials and the best cellular vertical distribution throughout the sagittal section of the well is achieved with Matrigel, GrowDex, and Myogel + GrowDex; in Myogel and media, the cells sink. For collagen protein expression, only Matrigel induces a notable difference while in the other materials, collagen staining is weak or difficult to distinguish from endogenous collagens. Ki-67 expression is maintained over time. The 3D-cryo well insert provides a new time-lapse histology perspective of analysis for liquid or gel cultures that maintains cells and macromolecules in their unaltered in-well configuration.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- tissue engineering
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- healthcare
- oxidative stress
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell death
- stem cells
- signaling pathway
- single cell
- mesenchymal stem cells
- ionic liquid
- high resolution
- radiation therapy
- long non coding rna
- rectal cancer
- zika virus
- binding protein
- wound healing
- bone regeneration
- crystal structure
- electron microscopy
- single molecule