Artículos de revistas
Multicellular spheroid formation and evolutionary conserved behaviors of apple snail hemocytes in culture
Date
2013-03Registration in:
Cueto, Juan Agustin; Vega, Israel Aníbal; Castro Vazquez, Alfredo Juan; Multicellular spheroid formation and evolutionary conserved behaviors of apple snail hemocytes in culture; Elsevier; Fish & Shellfish Immunology; 34; 2; 3-2013; 443-453
1050-4648
Author
Cueto, Juan Agustin
Vega, Israel Aníbal
Castro Vazquez, Alfredo Juan
Abstract
A hemocyte primary culture system for Pomacea canaliculata in a medium mimicking hemolymphatic plasma composition was developed. Hemocytes adhered and spread onto culture dish in the first few hours after seeding but later began forming aggregates. Time lapse video microscopy showed the dynamics of the early aggregation, with cells both entering and leaving the aggregates. During this period phagocytosis occurs and was quantified.Later (>4 h), hemocytes formed large spheroidal aggregates that increased in size and also merged with adjacent spheroids (24-96 h). Large single spheroids and spheroid aggregates detach from the bottom surface and float freely in the medium. Correlative confocal, transmission electron and phase contrast microscopy showed a peculiar organization of the spheroids, with a compact core, an intermediate zone with large extracellular lacunae and an outer zone of flattened cells; also, numerous round cells emitting cytoplasmic extensions were seen attaching to the spheroids? smooth surface. Dual DAPI/propidium iodide staining revealed the coexistence of viable and non-viable cells within aggregates, in varying proportions. DNA concentration increased during the first 24 h of culture and stabilized afterward. BrdU incorporation also indicated proliferation.Spontaneous spheroid formation in culture bears interesting parallels with spheroidal hemocyte aggregates found in vivo in P.canaliculata, and also with spheroids formed by tumoral or non-tumoral mammalian cells in vitro.