Growth characteristics of human epidermal kerationcytes from newborn foreskin in primary and serial cultures

1979 
Using gels of acid-soluble, collagen as a culture surface, trypsin-released keartinocytes from 0.1-mm, split-thickness sections of newborn foreskin may be plated with high efficiency and subcultured at a 1∶5 split a 2- to 3-week intervals for three subpassages. When plated at a density of 3.2×104 cells per cm2, keratinocytes attach to the gel with an efficiency of over 70%; after a lag phase of 3 days, the cells multiply exponentially with a doubling time of 60 hr. Cultures reach a growth-plateau phase at a density of 47.7×104 cells per cm2. Both hydrocortisone and epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulate slightly the growth of primary cultures; both factors are required for proliferation of the 2nd and further passage of keratinocytes. As the cultures reach, confluence multilayers, of stratified cells are formed and cells of squamous morphology are spontaneously released from the surface. When the released cells and the attached cells are pulsed with [3H]-histidine and [14C]-leucine, a higher ratio of histidine to leucine is observed in the released cells indicating the biochemical onset of maturation. Orange G-Aniline Blue staining of the released cells show some of the cells to be completely keratinized. Fibrous proteins extracted from the cultured cells and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis display the characteristic stratum corneum proteins of 60,000 and 66,000 daltons.
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