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. 1979 Jul;15(7):473-87.
doi: 10.1007/BF02618149.

Cerebral microvessels and derived cells in tissue culture: isolation and preliminary characterization

Cerebral microvessels and derived cells in tissue culture: isolation and preliminary characterization

L E DeBault et al. In Vitro. 1979 Jul.

Abstract

Microvessels isolated from mouse forebrain were used as the source material for the derivation of cerebral vascular endothelium and smooth-muscle cells in culture. The microvessels were isolated by a mechanical dispersion and filtration technique, and were maintained in vitro as organoid cultures. A microvessel classification system was developed and proved to be useful as a tool in monitoring culture progress and in predicting the type(s) of microvessel(s) that would give rise to migrating and/or proliferating cells. The isolated cerebral microvessels were heterogeneous in diameter, size of individual vascular isolate, and proliferative potential. The isolated microvessels ranged in diameter from 4 micron to 25 micron and in size from a single microvascular segment to a large multibranched plexus with mural cells. The initial viability, determined by erythrosin B exclusion, was approximately 50% on a per cell basis. All microvessel classes had proliferative potential although the rate and extent of proliferation were both microvessel class- and density-dependent. The smaller microvessels gave rise to endothelial cells, whereas the large microvessels gave rise to endothelial and smooth-muscle cells. The viability and progress of a microvessel toward derived cell proliferation seemed to be directly proportional to the number of mural cells present.

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