A Simplified, Langendorff-Free Method for Concomitant Isolation of Viable Cardiac Myocytes and Nonmyocytes From the Adult Mouse Heart
Genome Institute of Singapore · University of Birmingham
Abstract
To identify and optimize a convenient, alternative approach, allowing the robust isolation and culture of adult mouse cardiac myocytes using only common surgical and laboratory equipment. METHODS AND RESULTS: Cardiac myocytes were isolated with yields comparable to those in published Langendorff-based methods, using direct needle perfusion of the LV ex vivo and without requirement for heparin injection. Isolated myocytes can be cultured antibiotic free, with retained organized contractile and mitochondrial morphology, transcriptional signatures, calcium handling, responses to hypoxia, neurohormonal stimulation, and electric pacing, and are amenable to patch clamp and adenoviral gene transfer techniques. Furthermore, the methodology permits concurrent isolation, separation, and coculture of myocyte and nonmyocyte cardiac populations.
We present a novel, simplified method, demonstrating concomitant isolation of viable cardiac myocytes and nonmyocytes from the same adult mouse heart. We anticipate that this new approach will expand and accelerate innovative research in the field of cardiac biology.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.93
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 71
Authors
6- MAMatthew Ackers‐JohnsonCorresponding
Genome Institute of Singapore, University of Birmingham
- PYPeter Yiqing Li
Genome Institute of Singapore, University of Birmingham
- APAndrew P. Holmes
Genome Institute of Singapore, University of Birmingham
- SOSian-Marie O’Brien
Genome Institute of Singapore, University of Birmingham
- DPDavor Pavlović
Genome Institute of Singapore, University of Birmingham
Topics & keywords
- Myocyte
- Ex vivo
- Biology
- Cardiology
- In vivo
- Cell biology
- Medicine
- Biotechnology
- Good health and well-being