Affiliation:
1. Columbia Stem Cell Initiative, Stem Cell Core Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York New York
2. Garuda Therapeutics Cambridge Massachusetts
3. Spanish National Cancer Research Center Madrid Spain
4. Department of Neurology, Eleanor and Lou Gehrig ALS Center Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York New York
Abstract
AbstractPrimary fibroblasts are a precious resource in the field of translational regenerative medicine. Dermal fibroblasts derived from human subject biopsies are being used as donor tissues for the derivation of patient‐specific iPSC lines, which in turn are used for disease modeling, drug screening, tissue engineering, and cell transplantation. We developed a fast and simple protocol to grow dermal fibroblasts from skin biopsies. Using this protocol, we simply and firmly fix the biopsy piece on the surface of a tissue culture–treated plate and allow the fibroblasts to grow. This novel method eliminates any need for enzymatic digestion or mechanical dissociation of the biopsy piece. By using this newly developed protocol, we have successfully established around 100 fibroblast lines characterized by the expression of specific markers [Serpin H1 (Hsp‐47), F‐actin, and Vimentin]. Finally, we have used many of these fibroblast lines as donor tissues to successfully derive iPSC lines. We have developed a method that is simple, fast, convenient, efficient, and gentle on the cells to derive dermal fibroblasts from human skin biopsies. © 2023 The Authors. Current Protocols published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.Basic Protocol: Skin biopsy collection and fibroblast derivationSupport Protocol 1: Culturing, freezing, and thawing dermal fibroblasts derived from a skin biopsySupport Protocol 2: Characterization of dermal fibroblasts by immunocytochemistry
Subject
Medical Laboratory Technology,Health Informatics,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
3 articles.
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