A novel, low-volume method for organ culture of embryonic kidneys that allows development of cortico-medullary anatomical organization

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Date
2010
Volume
5
Issue
5
Journal
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
San Francisco, Calif. : Public Library of Science
Abstract

Here, we present a novel method for culturing kidneys in low volumes of medium that offers more organotypic development compared to conventional methods. Organ culture is a powerful technique for studying renal development. It recapitulates many aspects of early development very well, but the established techniques have some disadvantages: in particular, they require relatively large volumes (1-3 mls) of culture medium, which can make high-throughput screens expensive, they require porous (filter) substrates which are difficult to modify chemically, and the organs produced do not achieve good cortico-medullary zonation. Here, we present a technique of growing kidney rudiments in very low volumes of medium-around 85 microliters-using silicone chambers. In this system, kidneys grow directly on glass, grow larger than in conventional culture and develop a clear anatomical cortico-medullary zonation with extended loops of Henle. © 2010 Sebinger et al.

Description
Keywords
animal tissue, article, branching morphogenesis, cell count, cell size, concentration process, controlled study, culture medium, embryo, embryo culture, embryo development, Henle loop, intermethod comparison, kidney cell culture, kidney cortex, kidney development, kidney medulla, mouse, nephron, nonhuman, organ culture technique, primordium, ureter, animal, animal embryo, cell death, cell proliferation, culture medium, cytology, drug effect, growth, development and aging, histology, kidney cortex, kidney medulla, methodology, morphogenesis, organ culture technique, physiological stress, prenatal development, surface tension, silicone derivative, Animals, Cell Death, Cell Proliferation, Culture Media, Embryo, Mammalian, Kidney Cortex, Kidney Medulla, Mice, Morphogenesis, Nephrons, Organ Culture Techniques, Silicones, Stress, Physiological, Surface Tension
Citation
Sebinger, D. D. R., Unbekandt, M., Ganeva, V. V., Ofenbauer, A., Werner, C., & Davies, J. A. (2010). A novel, low-volume method for organ culture of embryonic kidneys that allows development of cortico-medullary anatomical organization. 5(5). https://doi.org//10.1371/journal.pone.0010550
License
CC BY 3.0 Unported