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Establishment of an in vitro culture system for chicken preblastodermal cells

  • Hyun Jeong Park
  • , Tae Sub Park
  • , Tae Min Kim
  • , Jin Nam Kim
  • , Sang Su Shin
  • , Jeong Mook Lim
  • , Jae Yong Han
  • Seoul National University
  • Avicore Biotechnology Institute Inc.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

To develop an alternative source for chicken pluripotent cells, we examined (1) whether undifferentiated preblastodermal cells could be sub-cultured in vitro for an extended period and (2) how subculturing affected the physiological properties of preblastodermal cells. The average number of pre-blastodermal cells was 2,397 in stage V embryos and 36,345 in stage VII embryos; stage X embryos had an average of 53,857 blastodermal cells. The average cell size decreased significantly (70.63-18.83 μm in diameter; P < 0.0001) as the embryo grew; this was closely related to a reduction in the size and number of lipid vesicles in the cell cytoplasm. The culture conditions were optimized for the stage V preblastodermal cells and the control stage X blastodermal cells. On STO feeder cells, the preblastodermal cells achieved stable growth in vitro only in HES medium or a mixed medium of the Knockout DMEM and HES media. However, more than 10 passages of preblastodermal cells at intervals of 3-4 days was possible only by using the Knockout/HES mixed medium and BRL cell-conditioned HES medium for the primary cultures and subcultures, respectively. Colony-forming preblastodermal cells had well-delineated cytoplasm, which was positively stained for stem cell-specific markers by anti-stage-specific embryo antigen-1 antibody, periodic acid-Schiff's solution, and alkaline phosphatase. When preblastodermal cells with or without culturing were transferred into the blastodermal cavity of stage X embryos, only in vitro-cultured preblastodermal cells at stage V (4/5 = 80%) and stage VII (2/8 = 25%) induced somatic chimerism in recipient chickens. In conclusion, undifferentiated preblastodermal cells could be subcultured, and only the colony-forming preblastodermal cells that stained positively for stem cell markers could induce somatic chimerism.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)452-461
Number of pages10
JournalMolecular Reproduction and Development
Volume73
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2006

Keywords

  • Chimera
  • Colony formation
  • In vitro culture
  • Stem cell
  • Subculture

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