Ovine fetuses from slaughterhouses: A useful source for neural cell primary cultures

2021 
A lot of evidence demonstrates that sheep could represent an experimental model to set up medical procedures in a view of their application on humans. Sheep are chosen as model for human biomechanical studies because their skeleton has some similarities with humans. Sheep are gyrencephalic so the cerebral cortex can show valuable signposts to identify particular cortical regions, unlike rats that are lissencephalic animals. The aim of this work was to set up sheep primary cultures from ovine fetuses at different ages, from pregnant uteri retrieved at local abattoirs. Cell characterization demonstrated that one cell population was immunopositive to GFAP and identifiable as astrocytes, whereas a second cell type was III β-tubulin-positive, and hence classified as neurons. A 60 day old fetus is suitable to obtain neurons, whereas in a 90 day old fetus the cell culture is predominantly characterized by glial cells. The procedure here proposed is inexpensive. Indeed, the fetuses casually found during sheep slaughtering have no cost, unlike the classical experimental animals, such as mice, rats, rabbits, that require very high economical efforts. Finally, our protocol fully eliminates the need of animal killing, being living animals replaced by a validated in vitro model in agreement with the 3Rs statement.
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