A simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.

Human amniotic membrane is a standard substratum used to culture limbal epithelial stem cells for transplantation to patients with limbal stem cell deficiency. Various methods were developed to decellularize amniotic membrane, because denuded membrane is poorly immunogenic and better supports repopu...

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Main Authors: Mehrnoosh Saghizadeh, Michael A Winkler, Andrei A Kramerov, David M Hemmati, Chantelle A Ghiam, Slobodan D Dimitrijevich, Dhruv Sareen, Loren Ornelas, Homayon Ghiasi, William J Brunken, Ezra Maguen, Yaron S Rabinowitz, Clive N Svendsen, Katerina Jirsova, Alexander V Ljubimov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3827346?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f62c5c583fd842bd8f0ed373085aa2ac2020-11-25T01:52:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01811e7963210.1371/journal.pone.0079632A simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.Mehrnoosh SaghizadehMichael A WinklerAndrei A KramerovDavid M HemmatiChantelle A GhiamSlobodan D DimitrijevichDhruv SareenLoren OrnelasHomayon GhiasiWilliam J BrunkenEzra MaguenYaron S RabinowitzClive N SvendsenKaterina JirsovaAlexander V LjubimovHuman amniotic membrane is a standard substratum used to culture limbal epithelial stem cells for transplantation to patients with limbal stem cell deficiency. Various methods were developed to decellularize amniotic membrane, because denuded membrane is poorly immunogenic and better supports repopulation by dissociated limbal epithelial cells. Amniotic membrane denuding usually involves treatment with EDTA and/or proteolytic enzymes; in many cases additional mechanical scraping is required. Although ensuring limbal cell proliferation, these methods are not standardized, require relatively long treatment times and can result in membrane damage. We propose to use 0.5 M NaOH to reliably remove amniotic cells from the membrane. This method was used before to lyse cells for DNA isolation and radioactivity counting. Gently rubbing a cotton swab soaked in NaOH over the epithelial side of amniotic membrane leads to nearly complete and easy removal of adherent cells in less than a minute. The denuded membrane is subsequently washed in a neutral buffer. Cell removal was more thorough and uniform than with EDTA, or EDTA plus mechanical scraping with an electric toothbrush, or n-heptanol plus EDTA treatment. NaOH-denuded amniotic membrane did not show any perforations compared with mechanical or thermolysin denuding, and showed excellent preservation of immunoreactivity for major basement membrane components including laminin α2, γ1-γ3 chains, α1/α2 and α6 type IV collagen chains, fibronectin, nidogen-2, and perlecan. Sodium hydroxide treatment was efficient with fresh or cryopreserved (10% dimethyl sulfoxide or 50% glycerol) amniotic membrane. The latter method is a common way of membrane storage for subsequent grafting in the European Union. NaOH-denuded amniotic membrane supported growth of human limbal epithelial cells, immortalized corneal epithelial cells, and induced pluripotent stem cells. This simple, fast and reliable method can be used to standardize decellularized amniotic membrane preparations for expansion of limbal stem cells in vitro before transplantation to patients.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3827346?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mehrnoosh Saghizadeh
Michael A Winkler
Andrei A Kramerov
David M Hemmati
Chantelle A Ghiam
Slobodan D Dimitrijevich
Dhruv Sareen
Loren Ornelas
Homayon Ghiasi
William J Brunken
Ezra Maguen
Yaron S Rabinowitz
Clive N Svendsen
Katerina Jirsova
Alexander V Ljubimov
spellingShingle Mehrnoosh Saghizadeh
Michael A Winkler
Andrei A Kramerov
David M Hemmati
Chantelle A Ghiam
Slobodan D Dimitrijevich
Dhruv Sareen
Loren Ornelas
Homayon Ghiasi
William J Brunken
Ezra Maguen
Yaron S Rabinowitz
Clive N Svendsen
Katerina Jirsova
Alexander V Ljubimov
A simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Mehrnoosh Saghizadeh
Michael A Winkler
Andrei A Kramerov
David M Hemmati
Chantelle A Ghiam
Slobodan D Dimitrijevich
Dhruv Sareen
Loren Ornelas
Homayon Ghiasi
William J Brunken
Ezra Maguen
Yaron S Rabinowitz
Clive N Svendsen
Katerina Jirsova
Alexander V Ljubimov
author_sort Mehrnoosh Saghizadeh
title A simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.
title_short A simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.
title_full A simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.
title_fullStr A simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.
title_full_unstemmed A simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.
title_sort simple alkaline method for decellularizing human amniotic membrane for cell culture.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Human amniotic membrane is a standard substratum used to culture limbal epithelial stem cells for transplantation to patients with limbal stem cell deficiency. Various methods were developed to decellularize amniotic membrane, because denuded membrane is poorly immunogenic and better supports repopulation by dissociated limbal epithelial cells. Amniotic membrane denuding usually involves treatment with EDTA and/or proteolytic enzymes; in many cases additional mechanical scraping is required. Although ensuring limbal cell proliferation, these methods are not standardized, require relatively long treatment times and can result in membrane damage. We propose to use 0.5 M NaOH to reliably remove amniotic cells from the membrane. This method was used before to lyse cells for DNA isolation and radioactivity counting. Gently rubbing a cotton swab soaked in NaOH over the epithelial side of amniotic membrane leads to nearly complete and easy removal of adherent cells in less than a minute. The denuded membrane is subsequently washed in a neutral buffer. Cell removal was more thorough and uniform than with EDTA, or EDTA plus mechanical scraping with an electric toothbrush, or n-heptanol plus EDTA treatment. NaOH-denuded amniotic membrane did not show any perforations compared with mechanical or thermolysin denuding, and showed excellent preservation of immunoreactivity for major basement membrane components including laminin α2, γ1-γ3 chains, α1/α2 and α6 type IV collagen chains, fibronectin, nidogen-2, and perlecan. Sodium hydroxide treatment was efficient with fresh or cryopreserved (10% dimethyl sulfoxide or 50% glycerol) amniotic membrane. The latter method is a common way of membrane storage for subsequent grafting in the European Union. NaOH-denuded amniotic membrane supported growth of human limbal epithelial cells, immortalized corneal epithelial cells, and induced pluripotent stem cells. This simple, fast and reliable method can be used to standardize decellularized amniotic membrane preparations for expansion of limbal stem cells in vitro before transplantation to patients.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3827346?pdf=render
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