Abstract

The influence of plating cell density of an originally enriched myocardial cell population has been studied in neonatal rat heart cells in culture. Low density (LDM) is defined as a density (24 h after plating) of 209 ± 44 cells/mm 2 (mean ± SEM) and is compared with high density (HDM), 419 ± 67 cells/mm 2. Cell growth is evaluated by the total cell number, the percentage of myocardial cells (M) in culture (PAS method) and the protein content per cell. Some differentiation parameters such as beating rates, glycogen concentration, enzymatic activities (cytochrome C oxidase and glycogen phosphorylase) are studied with time in culture (48, 96 and 192 hr). High density was designed to yield a complete confluency of the cells within 24 hr after plating and to minimize cell division of the non-muscle cells (F). At high density, cell division of F cells is effectively limited, thus leading to a more stable model regarding the cell density per plate and the percentage of M cells: 85.7 ± 4% and 33.4 ± 6% in LDM cultures compared with 86.5 ± 4.7% and 51.7 ± 9.8% in HDM cultures at 24 and 192 hr (mean ± SEM). Heart cells increase similarly in size with age in culture in both groups. In HDM cultures the spontaneous contractions begin sooner (24 hr) than in LDM cultures and are more rapidly synchronized. The beating rate is higher in HDM cultures between 48 and 96 hr; however, after this time it falls in HDM and does not fall in LDM. Thus the overgrowth of muscle cells by non-muscle cells is not responsible for loss of beating with time in culture but more likely high density could be a limiting factor for isotonic contraction. There is more glycogen per myocyte in LDM than in HDM cultures. The cell density influences the enzymatic activities of cytochrome C oxidase and glycogen phosphorylase. The cytochrome oxidase activity is higher in HDM cultures than in LDM cultures at 96 hr whereas glycogen phosphorylase activity is higher in LDM cultures at time 96 and 192 hr. In LDM cultures, the ratio cytochrome C oxidase/glycogen phosphorylase decreases with time in culture from 1.685 ± 0.680 at 48 hr to 0.780 ± 0.290 at 192 hr but not in HDM cultures (2.13 ± 0.36 and 1.64 ± 0.34 respectively). Thus plating density influences properties of heart cell cultures with regard to the overgrowth of the F-cell population and the differentiated state of M cells.

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