Standard Practice for Use of a Centrifugation Method to Quantify/Study Cell-Material Adhesive Interactions


Importancia y uso:

4.1 This practice describes a cell adhesion method that can be used to provide a detachment percent at a given RCF for cells that have adhered to a substrate, typically for a short time. The information generated by this practice can be used to obtain a semi-quantitative measurement of the adhesion of cells to either an uncoated or pre-coated substrate, when compared to a reference (adherent) cell type on the same substrate. As described in Reyes and Garcia (2003), it is recommended that the 50 % point be used for either ligand concentration or RCF for the most robust measurement of adhesion strength. The adhesion may vary due to changes in the phenotype of the cells or as a result of the specific properties of the surface. The substrate may include tissue culture-treated polystyrene, biomaterials, or bioactive surfaces. If the substrate is a hydrogel, care must be taken to avoid cohesive failure in the hydrogel (that is, detached cells have pulled away fragments of gel). The coating may consist of (but is not limited to) the following: natural or synthetic biomaterials, hydrogels, components of extracellular matrix (ECM), ligands, adhesion or bioactive molecules, genes, or gene products. Cell concentration is also critical, as use of too high a concentration of cells may result in cells detaching as a sheet, rather than as individual cells. This centrifugation approach, once validated, may be applicable for quality control (QC) and product development. However, until the method is correlated to other measures of cell attachment, the current method should be run in parallel with other known measures of cell adhesion.

4.2 This practice does not cover methods to quantitate changes in gene expression, or changes in biomarkers, as identified by immunostaining. This practice additionally does not cover quantitative image analysis techniques. In some cases, the change in adhesive properties may reflect on the degree of differentiation or de-differentiation of the cells. However, it is worth noting that adhesive interactions do not necessarily reflect the differentiation state of a particular cell type, although in many instances they do. (See X1.3 for application to the adhesion of chondrocytes.)

Subcomité:

F04.43

Volúmen:

13.02

Número ICS:

11.100.99 (Other standards related to laboratory medicine)

Palabras clave:

cell adhesion assay; centrifugation; chondrocytes; monolayer culture; serial passage; tissue culture-treated polystyrene;

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Norma
F3088

Versión
22

Estatus
Active

Clasificación
Practice

Fecha aprobación
2022-04-01