Abstract

The experiments presented in this paper show how growing cells on portable substrats can be useful to facilitate and accelerate the passaging (subculture) of anchorage-dependent cells. Experiments have shown that portable substrats are cheap, commercially available, and transparent. They are easily cut into various shapes and sizes, and are easy to sterilize. Portable substrats are also friendly to cells and permit faster than usual cell passaging procedures. Anchorage-dependent cells growing on the bottom of a culture vessel made of glass or polystyrene can be quickly passaged with previously-cut small fragments of glass fiber or nylon meshes or small fragments of polyester foil as well as nylon fishing lines and biodegradable surgeon threads that have been inserted into the vessel. The surfaces of such fragments of portable supports are quickly overgrown with cells and can be easily transferred to a new culture vessel. As with tissue explants, cells migrate and grow over the bottom of the new culture vessels. Using cell viability tests, analyses of proliferation and fluorescence microscopy, we confirmed the utility of the investigated substrats for cell culture. In addition, the passaging cells, together with a portable support (like explants), eliminate the need for an application of proteolytic enzymes which modify numerous cell properties and activities and would keep the cell from detaching from the substratum which would lead to the cell rounding and changes in the cell's cytoskeleton architecture.

Highlights

  • The experiments presented in this paper show how growing cells on portable substrats can be useful to facilitate and accelerate the passaging of anchorage-dependent cells

  • In all of our experiments, cells grew on the portable substrata with kinetics comparable to the way they grew on the bottom of commercially available, disposable polystyrene Petri dishes

  • When fragments of the supporting adhesive substrata, together with the cells growing on them, were transferred to a new vessel or onto an adhesive portable substratum, the cells passed from the old substrata to the new, clean material, very much like tissue explants, adhering and flattening onto the surface (Fig. 1 M, N)

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Summary

Introduction

The experiments presented in this paper show how growing cells on portable substrats can be useful to facilitate and accelerate the passaging (subculture) of anchorage-dependent cells. For explant-like cell passaging, cells were grown in Petri dishes (Falcon, polystyrene 3 and 6 cm in diameter) containing fragments of the different types of portable supports being tested (1-1.5 mm long fibers, 0.25 x 1 cm polyester foils).

Results
Conclusion

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