Influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes

Cryopreservation has been identified as a necessary barrier to overcome in the production of tissue engineered products for clinical application. Liver engineering and bioartificial liver assisting devices are on the forefront of tissue engineering research due to its high demand and clinical potent...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Magalhães, R., Nugraha, B., Pervaiz, Shazib, Yu, H., Kuleshova, L.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier Ltd 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51096
_version_ 1848758613506523136
author Magalhães, R.
Nugraha, B.
Pervaiz, Shazib
Yu, H.
Kuleshova, L.
author_facet Magalhães, R.
Nugraha, B.
Pervaiz, Shazib
Yu, H.
Kuleshova, L.
author_sort Magalhães, R.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Cryopreservation has been identified as a necessary barrier to overcome in the production of tissue engineered products for clinical application. Liver engineering and bioartificial liver assisting devices are on the forefront of tissue engineering research due to its high demand and clinical potential. In this study we propose that the cryopreservation of primary mammalian hepatocytes yields better results when these cells are in a tissue-like culture configuration since cell attachment is essential for cell survival in this cell type. We used two different tissue-engineered culture configurations: monolayers and spheroid culture; and two different concepts of cryopreservation, namely vitrification and freezing. Cell suspensions were also cryopreserved using both approaches and results were compared to the engineered cultures. Both engineered configurations and suspension were cryopreserved using both conventional freezing (cooling at 1 °C/minute using 10% DMSO in foetal calf serum) and vitrification (using 40% ethylene glycol 0.6 m sucrose supplemented with 9% Ficoll). These two approaches differ on the degree of mechanical stress they inflict on the material to be cryopreserved. The maintenance of cell-to-cell and the integrity of the actin cytoskeleton were assessed using scanning electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry respectively. Results showed that while there was no significant difference between the degree of integrity shown between vitrified and control engineered cultures, the same did not happen to the frozen engineered constructs. The disruption of the cytoskeletal structure correlated with increased levels of apoptotic markers. With cryopreserved suspensions there was evidence of disruption of the cytoskeletal structure. This study concluded that cell-to-cell contact is beneficial in the maintenance of viability post-cryopreservation and that the vitrification approach was far superior to those of conventional freezing when applied to 2D and 3D hepatocyte based engineered cultures. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:46:46Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-51096
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:46:46Z
publishDate 2012
publisher Elsevier Ltd
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-510962017-09-13T15:34:50Z Influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes Magalhães, R. Nugraha, B. Pervaiz, Shazib Yu, H. Kuleshova, L. Cryopreservation has been identified as a necessary barrier to overcome in the production of tissue engineered products for clinical application. Liver engineering and bioartificial liver assisting devices are on the forefront of tissue engineering research due to its high demand and clinical potential. In this study we propose that the cryopreservation of primary mammalian hepatocytes yields better results when these cells are in a tissue-like culture configuration since cell attachment is essential for cell survival in this cell type. We used two different tissue-engineered culture configurations: monolayers and spheroid culture; and two different concepts of cryopreservation, namely vitrification and freezing. Cell suspensions were also cryopreserved using both approaches and results were compared to the engineered cultures. Both engineered configurations and suspension were cryopreserved using both conventional freezing (cooling at 1 °C/minute using 10% DMSO in foetal calf serum) and vitrification (using 40% ethylene glycol 0.6 m sucrose supplemented with 9% Ficoll). These two approaches differ on the degree of mechanical stress they inflict on the material to be cryopreserved. The maintenance of cell-to-cell and the integrity of the actin cytoskeleton were assessed using scanning electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry respectively. Results showed that while there was no significant difference between the degree of integrity shown between vitrified and control engineered cultures, the same did not happen to the frozen engineered constructs. The disruption of the cytoskeletal structure correlated with increased levels of apoptotic markers. With cryopreserved suspensions there was evidence of disruption of the cytoskeletal structure. This study concluded that cell-to-cell contact is beneficial in the maintenance of viability post-cryopreservation and that the vitrification approach was far superior to those of conventional freezing when applied to 2D and 3D hepatocyte based engineered cultures. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51096 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2011.10.015 Elsevier Ltd restricted
spellingShingle Magalhães, R.
Nugraha, B.
Pervaiz, Shazib
Yu, H.
Kuleshova, L.
Influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes
title Influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes
title_full Influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes
title_fullStr Influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes
title_full_unstemmed Influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes
title_short Influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes
title_sort influence of cell culture configuration on the post-cryopreservation viability of primary rat hepatocytes
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51096