Abstract

Cerebrovascular endothelial cells from adult bovine brain were carried successfully in long-term, serial culture. Endothelial cells were obtained from the middle and anterior cerebral arteries and from capillaries isolated from grey matter of the cerebral cortex or caudate nucleus. Capillary cells were found to grow best in RPMI 1640 with 20% fetal bovine serum. They did not require tumor-conditioned medium or matrix-coated surfaces, although fibronectin was used to enhance the initial plating efficiency of the primary cultures. The same conditions were used to support satisfactory growth of arterial endothelial cells; however they did not grow as rapidly as the cells. Retention of endothelial-specific characteristics were shown for capillary-derived cells carried up to Passage 28, arterial-derived cells up to Passage 11, and after frozen storage of both types of cultured cells. Cultures of both arterial and capillary cells stained positively for Factor VIII antigen, exhibited a nonthrombogenic surface, and produced prostacyclin in response to arachidonic acid. Arterial endothelial cells produced more prostacyclin than capillary endothelium. The capillary cells had a unique tendency to assume a ringlike morphology after subculture and sometimes formed capillarylike networks of cell cords in dense cultures. When cultured in a three-dimensional plasma clot, capillary and arterial endothelial cells, but none of the other cell types studied, organized into tubelike structures reminiscent of capillary formation in vivo. The availability of long-term cultures of cerebrovascular endothelial cells provides an opportunity to compare properties of arterial and capillary endothelium from the same tissue and to investigate such processes as angiogenesis and blood-brain barrier induction.

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