Koebe H G, Dähnhardt C, Müller-Höcker J, Wagner H, Schildberg F W
Department of Surgery, Klinikum Grosshadern, LM University of Munich, Marchioninistrasse 15, Munich, D-81377, USA.
Cryobiology. 1996 Feb;33(1):127-41. doi: 10.1006/cryo.1996.0013.
Cryopreservation of freshly isolated hepatocytes is regarded the standard procedure for long term storage of liver cells. However, a dramatic loss in cell number, viability, and differentiated cell function is usually inevitable, and, upon thawing, hepatocytes do not attach well in culture. Freezing of hepatocyte cultures has already been shown to reduce these hazardous effects, probably due to the beneficial impact of a repair phase that allows the cells to restore their membranes during the first days of culture prior to and after freezing. We have compared the performance of porcine hepatocytes from slaughterhouse organs that were frozen at day 3 of immobilizing gel culture and stored at -80 degrees C for increasing time intervals up to 30 days (three groups; n = 3 each). Control groups consisted of batch identical hepatocyte cultures, either frozen at a fixed cooling rate (-1 degrees C/min; n = 3), subjected to rapid freezing (-10 degrees C/min; n = 3) or left without any freezing (n = 4). Upon thawing, light and electron microscopic studies revealed a cell survival rate of 70.3 +/- 10.5% (mean +/- SD; n = 9) in hepatocyte cultures after adjusted rate-controlled freezing. In these groups, the length of storage time did not influence results. Functional parameters, like albumin secretion values and ethoxycoumarin deethylase activity (cytochrome P450-IA1) were comparable to non-frozen cultures after a recovery time of 48 h post-thaw. Fixed cooling rates at -1 degrees C and -10 degrees C, respectively, showed a greater reduced viability (35.4 +/- 7.4%; 9. 87 +/- 2.8%) and a severely impaired post-thaw functional performance of cultures. Cryopreservation of hepatocyte cultures could provide a practical means of establishing a bank of hepatocyte cultures. This could be extremely useful for the development of a hybrid artificial liver device, and it might support repeated investigations on batch-controlled hepatocyte cultures, especially with respect to human cells.
新鲜分离的肝细胞的冷冻保存被视为肝细胞长期储存的标准程序。然而,细胞数量、活力和分化细胞功能的显著损失通常是不可避免的,并且在解冻后,肝细胞在培养中附着不佳。肝细胞培养物的冷冻已被证明可减少这些有害影响,这可能是由于修复阶段的有益作用,该阶段使细胞在冷冻前和冷冻后的培养初期能够恢复其细胞膜。我们比较了来自屠宰场器官的猪肝细胞的性能,这些肝细胞在固定凝胶培养的第3天被冷冻,并在-80℃下储存不同时间间隔直至30天(三组;每组n = 3)。对照组由批次相同的肝细胞培养物组成,要么以固定冷却速率(-1℃/分钟;n = 3)冷冻,要么进行快速冷冻(-10℃/分钟;n = 3),要么不进行任何冷冻(n = 4)。解冻后,光学和电子显微镜研究显示,经调整速率控制冷冻后的肝细胞培养物中的细胞存活率为70.3±10.5%(平均值±标准差;n = 9)。在这些组中,储存时间的长短不影响结果。解冻后48小时恢复时间后,白蛋白分泌值和乙氧基香豆素脱乙基酶活性(细胞色素P450-IA1)等功能参数与未冷冻的培养物相当。分别在-1℃和-10℃的固定冷却速率下,显示出活力的更大降低(35.4±7.4%;9.87±2.8%)以及培养物解冻后功能性能的严重受损。肝细胞培养物的冷冻保存可为建立肝细胞培养物库提供一种实用方法。这对于混合人工肝装置的开发可能极其有用,并且它可能支持对批次控制的肝细胞培养物进行重复研究,特别是对于人类细胞而言。