Abstract

Growth and enzyme development in cell cultures of fetal rat brain were influenced by type of growth medium, cell density, and age of fetal tissue source. Cells grew better in one medium (DMEM), but the other (F12G) enhanced development of choline acetyltransferase activity. One type of growth medium (DMEM) lost efficacy 2 weeks after preparation of complete medium. Cell division rate was density dependent, and choline acetyltransferase development was related to time in culture and cell concentration. Some results suggested division of choline acetyltransferase producing cells. Differences in age of tissue source resulted primarily in differences in growth: cultures of 21 day fetal cells developed more protein per 106 cells inoculated than cultures of cells from younger animals; there was little difference in enzyme activity per culture. Conditions may be controlled such that fetal rat brain cells will grow and express differentiated functions in culture in a predictable manner.

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