Human Fetal Cortical Tissue Fragments Survive Grafting following One Week Storage AT +4°C

Grafting of human fetal tissue fragments has been used successfully in experimental and clinical trials. The development of techniques to store human fetal tissue fragments for longer time periods would allow to establish temporary tissue banks. We dissected several human cortical tissue fragments f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christian Humpel PhD, Marc Bygdeman, Lars Olson, Ingrid Strömberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 1994-11-01
Series:Cell Transplantation
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/096368979400300604
id doaj-64d499050b1846b78509ee97b5ba247a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-64d499050b1846b78509ee97b5ba247a2020-11-25T03:33:01ZengSAGE PublishingCell Transplantation0963-68971555-38921994-11-01310.1177/096368979400300604Human Fetal Cortical Tissue Fragments Survive Grafting following One Week Storage AT +4°CChristian Humpel PhD0Marc Bygdeman1Lars Olson2Ingrid Strömberg3Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, SwedenDepartment of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, SwedenDepartment of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, SwedenDepartment of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, SwedenGrafting of human fetal tissue fragments has been used successfully in experimental and clinical trials. The development of techniques to store human fetal tissue fragments for longer time periods would allow to establish temporary tissue banks. We dissected several human cortical tissue fragments from one fetus and tested different storage conditions (cooling, freezing, culturing). After storage, the tissue fragments were transplanted into cavities in the cortex of host rats and the volume of the surviving grafts calculated. We report that human cortical tissue fragments grafted immediately after dissection (control group) or grafted after storage for 3 h in cryopreservation medium at room temperature survived grafting and resulted in graft sizes of 102 ± 26 mm3 and 242 ± 210 mm3, respectively, however, statistically not different. When the human cortical tissue fragments were slowly frozen and stored for 1 wk and/or when the fragments were cultured for 1 week in culture medium using a roller tube technique, grafts did not survive under our conditions. However, when the human cortical tissue fragments were stored for 1 week at +4°C in cryopreservation medium, the graft size (48 ± 24 mm3) was reduced but statistically not different from the control group. We conclude that human cortical tissue fragments can be stored at +4°C for at least 1 wk without major loss of ability to survive grafting.https://doi.org/10.1177/096368979400300604
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Humpel PhD
Marc Bygdeman
Lars Olson
Ingrid Strömberg
spellingShingle Christian Humpel PhD
Marc Bygdeman
Lars Olson
Ingrid Strömberg
Human Fetal Cortical Tissue Fragments Survive Grafting following One Week Storage AT +4°C
Cell Transplantation
author_facet Christian Humpel PhD
Marc Bygdeman
Lars Olson
Ingrid Strömberg
author_sort Christian Humpel PhD
title Human Fetal Cortical Tissue Fragments Survive Grafting following One Week Storage AT +4°C
title_short Human Fetal Cortical Tissue Fragments Survive Grafting following One Week Storage AT +4°C
title_full Human Fetal Cortical Tissue Fragments Survive Grafting following One Week Storage AT +4°C
title_fullStr Human Fetal Cortical Tissue Fragments Survive Grafting following One Week Storage AT +4°C
title_full_unstemmed Human Fetal Cortical Tissue Fragments Survive Grafting following One Week Storage AT +4°C
title_sort human fetal cortical tissue fragments survive grafting following one week storage at +4°c
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Cell Transplantation
issn 0963-6897
1555-3892
publishDate 1994-11-01
description Grafting of human fetal tissue fragments has been used successfully in experimental and clinical trials. The development of techniques to store human fetal tissue fragments for longer time periods would allow to establish temporary tissue banks. We dissected several human cortical tissue fragments from one fetus and tested different storage conditions (cooling, freezing, culturing). After storage, the tissue fragments were transplanted into cavities in the cortex of host rats and the volume of the surviving grafts calculated. We report that human cortical tissue fragments grafted immediately after dissection (control group) or grafted after storage for 3 h in cryopreservation medium at room temperature survived grafting and resulted in graft sizes of 102 ± 26 mm3 and 242 ± 210 mm3, respectively, however, statistically not different. When the human cortical tissue fragments were slowly frozen and stored for 1 wk and/or when the fragments were cultured for 1 week in culture medium using a roller tube technique, grafts did not survive under our conditions. However, when the human cortical tissue fragments were stored for 1 week at +4°C in cryopreservation medium, the graft size (48 ± 24 mm3) was reduced but statistically not different from the control group. We conclude that human cortical tissue fragments can be stored at +4°C for at least 1 wk without major loss of ability to survive grafting.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/096368979400300604
work_keys_str_mv AT christianhumpelphd humanfetalcorticaltissuefragmentssurvivegraftingfollowingoneweekstorageat4c
AT marcbygdeman humanfetalcorticaltissuefragmentssurvivegraftingfollowingoneweekstorageat4c
AT larsolson humanfetalcorticaltissuefragmentssurvivegraftingfollowingoneweekstorageat4c
AT ingridstromberg humanfetalcorticaltissuefragmentssurvivegraftingfollowingoneweekstorageat4c
_version_ 1724565313250394112