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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Cryopreservation of rat, dog and human hepatocytes: influence of preculture and cryoprotectants on recovery, cytochrome P450 activities and induction upon thawing

María Teresa DonatoNuria JiménezJ. Vicente CastellAgustín LahozMaria-josé Gómez-lechón

subject

MaleHot TemperatureCryoprotectantHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisCellCombined useDrug Evaluation PreclinicalToxicologyBiochemistryCryopreservationRats Sprague-DawleyCryoprotective AgentsDogsCytochrome P-450 Enzyme SystemmedicineAnimalsHumansDimethyl SulfoxideViability assayCells CulturedCryopreservationPharmacologybiologyPovidoneCytochrome P450General MedicineRatsCell biologyEnzyme Activationmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistryHepatocytesbiology.proteinDrug metabolism

description

Several cryopreservation protocols for hepatocytes have been proposed over the past few years, but their effectiveness varies greatly as a function of the characteristics of the method used. One factor in the success of cryopreservation is the quality of cells before freezing. The results suggest that the cryopreservation of hepatocytes in a medium containing polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), in addition to DMSO, constitutes a convenient means of long-term storage of hepatocytes for preparing primary cultures to be used in drug metabolism studies. The combined use of the two cryoprotectants is particularly critical for low-viability cell suspensions. An interesting alternative to increase cell viability is the preculture of hepatocytes before cryopreservation. By the use of this procedure, high-quality cells, estimated in terms of post-thaw recovery, viability, adaptation of hepatocytes to culture, drug-metabolizing capability and cytochrome P450 induction, are obtained. Therefore, cryopreserved hepatocytes can provide a regular source of metabolically competent cells for in vitro investigations of the metabolic profile of new drugs and drug-drug interactions in pharmaco-toxicological research.

https://doi.org/10.1080/00498250600674352