Method for organotypic tissue culture in the aged animal

[Display omitted] Organotypic slicing of brain tissue from young rodents has been used as a powerful model system for biomedical research [1–3]. Organotypic slicing complements cell culture and in vivo studies in multiple facets. This system can be useful for investigating manipulation of cellular s...

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Veröffentlicht in:MethodsX 2017-01, Vol.4 (C), p.166-171
Hauptverfasser: Schommer, Jared, Schrag, Matthew, Nackenoff, Alexander, Marwarha, Gurdeep, Ghribi, Othman
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] Organotypic slicing of brain tissue from young rodents has been used as a powerful model system for biomedical research [1–3]. Organotypic slicing complements cell culture and in vivo studies in multiple facets. This system can be useful for investigating manipulation of cellular signaling pathways without the hindrance of the blood-brain barrier while sacrificing fewer animals in the process. It also allows for preserved cellular connectivity and local intact circuitry which is a drawback of isolated cell cultures. Studies on age-related diseases have mainly used embryonic or early postnatal organotypic slice tissue. Excluding synaptic plasticity studies that are usually carried-out over a few hours and use adult mice or rats, a handful of studies performed on adult animals have had success for survival of slices [4,5]. Here we describe a method for culturing organotypic slices with high viability from hippocampus of aged mice and rabbits. •Our method permits slices from mice as old as 16 months and rabbits as old as years of age to survive ex vivo up to 8 weeks [6–9]. Such a slice system may be relevant to investigating age-related brain diseases.
ISSN:2215-0161
2215-0161
DOI:10.1016/j.mex.2017.03.003