Folia Biologica
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Biology, Charles University 

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Fol. Biol. 2005, 51, 126-132

https://doi.org/10.14712/fb2005051050126

Establishment and Characterization of Primary and Subsequent Subcultures of Normal Mouse Urothelial Cells

Mateja Erdani Kreft, S. Hudoklin, M. Sterle

Institute of Cell Biology, Medical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia

Received July 2005
Accepted September 2005

In this study, we report a reliable technique for the harvest, cultivation and expansion of monoculture of NMU. The NMU were harvested by two methods, directly from the urothelium in vivo and indirectly from the urothelial outgrowths of bladder explant cultures. Primary cultures and subsequent subcultures were propagated in the mixture of media MCDB 153 and Advanced-DMEM, and conditioned medium. Primary urothelial cells required an initial plating density of 1 × 105 viable cells/cm2 for survival, while passaged cells needed lower plating densities (1 × 104 viable cells per cm2). The cultured cells were identified as urothelial by their epithelioid morphology and by the positive immunofluorescence labelling of tight junctional proteins, occludin and ZO-1, adherens protein E-cadherin and cytoskeletal protein cytokeratin 7. Markers of highly differentiated urothelial cells, cytokeratin 20 and uroplakins, were not expressed. Furthermore, the immunofluorescence labelling of occludin and cytokeratin 7 was not detected in later passages when urothelial cells replicated at a high rate. In spite of the use of conditioned medium derived from V79 fibroblast cell culture supernatant, the NMU in the primary cultures and subsequent subcultures expressed a basal/intermediate cell phenotype. In conclusion, we demonstrate that homogeneous long-term culture of NMU can be developed. Since powerful transgenic tools exist to manipulate the mouse genome, our findings should help design the mouse in vitro systems for studying the control mechanisms of urothelial cell proliferation, stratification and differentiation in health and disease.

Funding

This work was supported by the Slovenian Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology (Grant No. Z3-6046-0381-04).

References

23 live references