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48-602MAG
Buffer Detection Kit for Magnetic Beads
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Using a 3D cell model of Alzheimer’s disease can enhance studies of this form of age-related dementia, characterized by progressive memory loss and cognitive impairment. A recently developed protocol for making such a 3D cell model uses ReNcell® VM human neural stem cells, and the relevant protocols are described here.
Historically, in vitro human models of Alzheimer’s disease have been challenging due to high levels of soluble and insoluble toxic amyloid β (Aβ) species that do not recapitulate the true AD pathology. Recently, Kim et. al created a three-dimensional human neural stem cell model of Alzheimer’s Disease using β-amyloid precursor protein and presenilin-1 overexpressing ReNcell™ VM human neural stem cell lines. These cell lines were able to induce robust extracellular deposition of amyloid-β, including amyloid-β plaques, and high levels of phosphorylated tau in the soma and neurites, as well as filamentous tau.
Warm the ReNcell® NSC Maintenance Media and Accutase solution in a 37 °C water bath for at least 10 min.
Wash ~95% confluent ReNcell® cells in a T25 flask with 3 mL of D-PBS, aspirate the D-PBS and add 0.5 mL of Accutase under a biosafety culture hood.
Incubate the cells in a 37 °C CO2 incubator for 3–5 min, add 3 mL of prewarmed ReNcell® NSC Maintenance Media and transfer the cell suspensions to a 15-mL sterile conical tube.
Spin down the cells at 2,000g for 3 min at room temperature, remove the supernatant and resuspend the cell pellet in 12 mL of ReNcell® NSC Maintenance Media.
Dispense 4 mL of the ReNcell® suspension into each Matrigel®-coated T25 flask, and then incubate it for 3–4d in a 37 °C CO2 incubator.
Note: After splitting (1:3 ratio), ReNcell® cells generally grow confluent after 3–4d. If cells are not confluent at that time, replace the medium with fresh ReNcell® NSC Maintenance Media and wait for 1 or 2d.
Viral Infection of ReNcell® VM Cells
Note: Packaged lentivirus is now available through Merck. Order now.
To prepare ReNcell® cells for infection, dislodge and spin down the cells from a confluent T25 flask, as described in Steps 1–4. Resuspend the cell pellet in 12 mL of prewarmed ReNcell® NSC Maintenance Media and dispense 2 mL of the cell suspension into each well of a Matrigel® matrix-coated six-well plate. Gently cross-shake the dish, and allow the cells to settle overnight.
Replace the medium with 2 mL of prewarmed ReNcell® NSC Maintenance Media. When cells reach 70–80% confluence, add 6 × 106 transducing units (TU) of viral particles per well to achieve an approximate multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1. Mix gently and incubate the cells overnight.
Wash the cells twice with 2 mL of prewarmed ReNcell® NSC Maintenance Media, and then apply 2 mL of the medium. Confluence should increase over time. Transgene expression can be expected 48 h after infection and should be detectable by fluorescence microscopy.
Note: Carefully monitor the culture. If abnormal cell death is observed, replace the medium immediately.
On day 4, if the cells are confluent, passage the cells as described in Steps 1–5 and recommence normal culturing. If the cells did not reach complete confluence by this point, replace the medium instead of passaging, and incubate until the cells reach confluence. To generate cells expressing both APPSL/GFP and PSEN1(E9)/mCherry (ReN-mGAP cells), the transduced cells can be infected again with different lentiviral vectors after splitting, as described in Steps 6–8.
Validate the infection by microscopic detection of GFP and mCherry fluorescence and western blot analysis of overexpressed APPSL and PSEN1(E9). Typically, >50% of infected cells visibly express the fluorescent marker.
Note: The infected, validated cells can be frozen and stored in a liquid LN2 tank at least for 1 year before flow cytometry analyses.
Enrichment of High-Expressing Transgenic ReNcell® VM Cells
Culture the transduced ReNcell® VM cells until confluence is reached (a 95% confluent T25 flask yields ~2–3 × 106 cells). Although the optimal total cell count depends on the infection efficiency, at least 2–3 × 106 successfully transduced cells should be available (when assayed by fluorescent cell sorting or fluorescence microscopy).
Detach the cells as described in Steps 1–4, but resuspend the cell pellets with 4 mL of D-PBS. Determine the cell number using an automated cell counter.
Spin down the cells briefly at 2,000g at room temperature, remove the supernatant and resuspend the cell pellets in ice-cold sorting medium (1 mL per 107 cells).
To singularize the cells, aspirate the cell suspension with a 1000μl pipette, gently press the tip against a cell strainer mesh at a 90° angle and empty the pipette forcefully. In case of blockage, carefully move the pipette tip across the mesh while maintaining pressure. Collect the filtered suspension in a 15-mL centrifugation tube.
Note: The suspended cells can be stored on ice at least for 1 h before fluorescence-activated cell sorting.
Perform fluorescence-activated cell sorting using GFP (488 nm, 200 mW excitation, 530/30 emission) and mCherry (561 nm, 150 mW excitation, 610/20 emission) to define and sort populations for the final bulk sorting. Set gates to select cells with high expression of APPSL/GFP alone, APPSL/PSEN1(E9)/mCherry alone or APPSL/GFP and PSEN1(E9)/mCherry together.
Immediately after sorting, plate the cells into Matrigel® matrix-coated dishes.
Note: The suspended cells can be stored in a cell collection tube on ice for up to 1 h before plating.
Culturing Sorted ReNcell® VM Cells
Spin the cells down at 2,000g for 3 min at 4°C, and then remove the supernatant and resuspend the pellet in prewarmed ReNcell® NSC Maintenance Media (1 mL per 2 × 106 collected cells).
Note: Determine the cell concentration after resuspension and adjust the volume accordingly. Even counts from sorting can lead to substantial overestimation.
Seed the cells on Matrigel® matrix-coated 24-well plates at an initial density of 2 × 105 cells per cm2. Expand the cells serially into Matrigel® matrix-coated six-well plates, and finally into Matrigel® matrix-coated T25 flasks. Make multiple cell stocks at this stage. Passage the cells as described in Steps 1–5. When sufficient cells have been grown, proceed to the next step.
Note: High seeding density after sorting is pivotal to promoting cell proliferation. At this stage, it is very important to make multiple frozen cell culture stocks and to record passage numbers. We observed that some high-expressing cell lines rapidly lost APPSL and PSEN1(E9) expression after four passages.
3D Matrigel® Matrix Cultures of ReNcell® VM Cells
Take out a Matrigel® matrix stock from the −80 °C freezer and place it in a 4 °C refrigerator 1 d before use.
Grow ~95% confluent control and FAD ReNcell® cells in five Matrigel® matrix-coated T25 flasks. An approximate number of ReNcell® cells in a confluent T25 flask is 3–4 × 106. It takes generally 2d after passaging the cells.
Spray down an ice bucket with ethanol and expose it to UV radiation in a cell culture hood for ~20 min.
Place the ReNcell® differentiation medium and Matrigel® matrix stock on ice.
Note: Matrigel® matrix tends to solidify at >10 °C. Thaw it at 4 °C overnight and then keep it on ice until use.
Remove the medium from the T25 flasks with aspirating pipettes. Be careful not to touch the cells with the pipettes; always use the vacuum on the non-cell side.
Wash the cells once with 3 mL of D-PBS per T25 flask, and then carefully remove it with the aspirating pipettes.
Add 0.5 mL of Accutase™ reagent into each flask, and incubate the cells at 37 °C for 3–5 min.
Dislodge the cells by forcefully tapping the side of the flask until clumps of cells completely detach.
Resuspend the cells with 3 mL of ReNcell® differentiation medium and pipette it up and down inside the flask at least three times.
Transfer the cell suspensions from all five T25 flasks into a 15-mL tube.
Centrifuge the tube for 2 min at 2,000g at room temperature.
Remove the medium with aspirating pipettes.
Resuspend the cell pellet in 2 mL of cold ReNcell® differentiation medium and vortex for 10s. Set the 15-mL tubes on ice.
Take a small aliquot of suspended cells and dilute 1:10 for cell counting (10μl of suspension: 90μl of differentiation medium).
Count the cells using a cell counter slide; dilute the cells if needed (optimum concentration is ~2 × 107 cells per ml before adding Matrigel® matrix at a 1:1 ratio in the next steps).
Note: It is desirable to achieve a high cell concentration at this stage. We have found that 1 × 107 cells per ml (after adding Matrigel® matrix at 1:1 ratio; see the Step 34) show robust APPand p-tau accumulation in biochemical analysis.
3D Culture Cell Seeding of ReNcell® VM Cells
Follow option A to make thick-layer 3D cultures or option B for thin-layer 3D cultures.
Note: Plating a high number of cells is important in order to achieve APPaggregates early. The desired number of cells is 1 × 107 cells per mL in 3D Matrigel® matrix mixture. Therefore, enough cells need to be grown at this stage. The passage number and the condition of the cells are also important.
(A) Thick-layer 3D culture (3–4-mm thickness)
Add cold Matrigel® matrix to the cell suspension on ice (1:1 (vol/vol) dilution). Make sure to chill the pipette tips first by pipetting cold differentiation medium back and forth before transferring Matrigel® matrix.
Vortex the mixture for 30 s.
Dispense 300 μL of the Matrigel®/cell suspension mixture into each tissue culture insert in 24-well plates using prechilled pipettes.
Incubate the plates at 37 °C in a CO2 incubator overnight.
Add prewarmed (in 37 °C water bath) differentiation medium to the plates (1 ml: 500 μL into the insert and
500 μL into the surrounding well) and place them back in the incubator.
Change half of the volume of the medium every 3–4 d; at the beginning, medium changing may be needed every 2d depending on the medium color. Never leave differentiated cells drying with no medium.
Differentiate 3D-plated cells for 4–17 weeks, depending on the experiments. Drug treatments should be done in the last 2 weeks before endpoint analyses.
Note: As it is not easy to monitor the thick-layer culture under an optical microscope, it is important to perform a routine LDH release assay to check the status of the cultures. It is also strongly recommended to set up thin-layer 3D cultures from the same Matrigel®/cell mixture to monitor the culture quality.
(B) Thin-layer 3D cultures (100–300-mm thickness)
Add cold Matrigel® matrix to the cell suspension on ice (1:1 (vol/vol) dilution). Make sure to chill the pipette tips first by pipetting cold differentiation medium back and forth before transferring Matrigel® matrix. For 96-well-plate thin-layer cultures, further dilute 1:1 Matrigel® matrix/cell mixture by adding five volumes of the cold ReNcell® differentiation medium (1:11 dilution final), and vortex it for 30 s. The same dilution rate can be used for thin-layer 3D cultures in 8-well/16-well chambered cover-glass slides or MatTek™ glass-bottomed dishes.
Plate 100 μL of the Matrigel® matrix/cell suspension mixture per well of a 96-well plate using prechilled pipettes. If a thicker 3D culture is desired, use two drops per well (160 μL using a multichannel pipette). A volume of 200 μL is recommended for eight-well chambered cover-glass slides and 300 μL for glass-bottomed dishes.
Incubate the plates at 37 °C in a CO2 incubator overnight.
The next day, add two drops of prewarmed ReNcell® differentiation medium to each well of the 96-well plates (160 μL using a multichannel pipette), 200 μL for eight-well chambered cover-glass slides and 300 μL for glass-bottomed dishes.
Change half of the volume of the medium every 3–4d; at the beginning, medium changing may be needed every 2 depending on the medium color. Never leave differentiated cells drying with no medium. Drug treatments should be done in the last 2 weeks before endpoint analyses.
Note: ReNcell® differentiation in thin-layer 3D cultures can be closely monitored by optical and fluorescence microscopy. Some of the cultures can be fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde at 2–4 weeks and tested for neural marker expressions by immunofluorescent staining or immunohistochemistry.