Abstract

In an effort to develop a suitable bioassay for testing lung growth factors that might be operative during compensatory lung growth following partial pneumonectomy, a simple and inexpensive lung organ culture system was characterized. The culture employs lung tissue slices obtained by means of a device allowing thicknesses of 500 microns to be cut reproducibly. To avoid the collapse of the organ, the alveolar spaces were filled prior to culture with Noble agar-containing Eagle's-Dulbecco's modified medium. Lung tissue sections could be maintained ultrastructurally intact for at least one week. The results showed that upon culture, a part of the type II pneumocytes undergo differentiation into type I pneumocytes, thus demonstrating that the culture system may be suited for differentiation studies. One surprising feature of this culture system was the mitogenic impulse associated with culture. Radioactively labeled thymidine incorporation was strongly stimulated in the culture, mainly affecting the epithelial cells, as could be established by "back-to-back" autoradiography. With a reconstruction experiment, it was possible to demonstrate the local release of a mitogenic factor following slicing, mincing, or dissection of the lung tissue, which could be assayed by its ability to induce serum-starved Balb/c 3T3 cells to synthesize DNA in culture.

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