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Routine culture and study of adult human brain cells from neurosurgical specimens
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Routine culture and study of adult human brain cells from neurosurgical specimens

Thomas I-H Park, Leon C D Smyth, Miranda Aalderink, Zoe R Woolf, Justin Rustenhoven, Kevin Lee, Deidre Jansson, Amy Smith, Sheryl Feng, Jason Correia, …
Nature protocols, Vol.17(2), pp.190-221
01/02/2022
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/46199

Abstract

Brain - cytology Cell Culture Techniques - methods Neurons - cytology Neurosurgical Procedures - methods Neurological models translational research disease modeling cell culture protocol Centre for Redox Biology & Medicine Collection
When modeling disease in the laboratory, it is important to use clinically relevant models. Patient-derived human brain cells grown in vitro to study and test potential treatments provide such a model. Here, we present simple, highly reproducible coordinated procedures that can be used to routinely culture most cell types found in the human brain from single neurosurgically excised brain specimens. The cell types that can be cultured include dissociated cultures of neurons, astrocytes, microglia, pericytes and brain endothelial and neural precursor cells, as well as explant cultures of the leptomeninges, cortical slice cultures and brain tumor cells. The initial setup of cultures takes ~2 h, and the cells are ready for further experiments within days to weeks. The resulting cells can be studied as purified or mixed population cultures, slice cultures and explant-derived cultures. This protocol therefore enables the investigation of human brain cells to facilitate translation of neuroscience research to the clinic.
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