O'Meara Ryan W, Ryan Scott D, Colognato Holly, Kothary Rashmi
Regenerative Medicine Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ontario, Canada.
J Vis Exp. 2011 Aug 21(54):3324. doi: 10.3791/3324.
Identifying the molecular mechanisms underlying OL development is not only critical to furthering our knowledge of OL biology, but also has implications for understanding the pathogenesis of demyelinating diseases such as Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Cellular development is commonly studied with primary cell culture models. Primary cell culture facilitates the evaluation of a given cell type by providing a controlled environment, free of the extraneous variables that are present in vivo. While OL cultures derived from rats have provided a vast amount of insight into OL biology, similar efforts at establishing OL cultures from mice has been met with major obstacles. Developing methods to culture murine primary OLs is imperative in order to take advantage of the available transgenic mouse lines. Multiple methods for extraction of OPCs from rodent tissue have been described, ranging from neurosphere derivation, differential adhesion purification and immunopurification (1-3). While many methods offer success, most require extensive culture times and/or costly equipment/reagents. To circumvent this, purifying OPCs from murine tissue with an adaptation of the method originally described by McCarthy & de Vellis (2) is preferred. This method involves physically separating OPCs from a mixed glial culture derived from neonatal rodent cortices. The result is a purified OPC population that can be differentiated into an OL-enriched culture. This approach is appealing due to its relatively short culture time and the unnecessary requirement for growth factors or immunopanning antibodies. While exploring the mechanisms of OL development in a purified culture is informative, it does not provide the most physiologically relevant environment for assessing myelin sheath formation. Co-culturing OLs with neurons would lend insight into the molecular underpinnings regulating OL-mediated myelination of axons. For many OL/neuron co-culture studies, dorsal root ganglion neurons (DRGNs) have proven to be the neuron type of choice. They are ideal for co-culture with OLs due to their ease of extraction, minimal amount of contaminating cells, and formation of dense neurite beds. While studies using rat/mouse myelinating xenocultures have been published (4-6), a method for the derivation of such OL/DRGN myelinating co-cultures from post-natal murine tissue has not been described. Here we present detailed methods on how to effectively produce such cultures, along with examples of expected results. These methods are useful for addressing questions relevant to OL development/myelinating function, and are useful tools in the field of neuroscience.
确定少突胶质细胞(OL)发育的分子机制不仅对于深化我们对OL生物学的认识至关重要,而且对于理解诸如多发性硬化症(MS)等脱髓鞘疾病的发病机制也具有重要意义。细胞发育通常使用原代细胞培养模型进行研究。原代细胞培养通过提供一个可控的环境,排除体内存在的外部变量,便于对特定细胞类型进行评估。虽然源自大鼠的OL培养物为OL生物学提供了大量的见解,但从小鼠建立OL培养物的类似努力却遇到了重大障碍。为了利用现有的转基因小鼠品系,开发培养小鼠原代OL的方法势在必行。已经描述了多种从啮齿动物组织中提取少突胶质前体细胞(OPC)的方法,从神经球衍生、差异粘附纯化到免疫纯化(1-3)。虽然许多方法都取得了成功,但大多数方法需要较长的培养时间和/或昂贵的设备/试剂。为了避免这种情况,采用最初由麦卡锡和德维利斯(2)描述的方法的改进版从鼠组织中纯化OPC是首选。该方法涉及从新生啮齿动物皮质衍生的混合神经胶质培养物中物理分离OPC。结果是获得了一个纯化的OPC群体,可将其分化为富含OL的培养物。这种方法因其相对较短的培养时间以及对生长因子或免疫淘选抗体的不必要需求而具有吸引力。虽然在纯化培养物中探索OL发育的机制很有意义,但它并没有为评估髓鞘形成提供最生理相关的环境。将OL与神经元共培养将有助于深入了解调节OL介导的轴突髓鞘形成的分子基础。对于许多OL/神经元共培养研究,背根神经节神经元(DRGN)已被证明是首选的神经元类型。它们因其易于提取、污染细胞数量最少以及形成密集的神经突床而非常适合与OL共培养。虽然已经发表了使用大鼠/小鼠髓鞘形成异种培养物的研究(4-6),但尚未描述从出生后鼠组织中获得此类OL/DRGN髓鞘形成共培养物的方法。在这里,我们介绍了如何有效产生此类培养物的详细方法以及预期结果的示例。这些方法对于解决与OL发育/髓鞘形成功能相关的问题很有用,并且是神经科学领域的有用工具。