Isolation and characterization of rheumatoid arthritis synovial fibroblasts from primary culture - Primary culture cells markedly differ from fourth-passage cells

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Abstract

To reduce culture artifacts by conventional repeated passaging and long-term culture in vitro, the isolation of synovial fibroblasts (SFB) was attempted from rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovial membranes by trypsin/collagenase digest, short-term in vitro adherence (7 days), and negative isolation using magnetobead-coupled anti-CD14 monoclonal antibodies. This method yielded highly enriched SFB (85% prolyl-4-hydroxylase+/74% Thy-1/CD90+ cells; <2% contaminating macrophages; <1% leukocytes/endothelial cells) that, in comparison with conventional fourth-passage RA-SFB, showed a markedly different phenotype and significantly lower proliferation rates upon stimulation with platelet-derived growth factor and IL-1β. This isolation method is simple and reliable, and may yield cells with features closer to the in vivo configuration of RA-SFB by avoiding extended in vitro culture.

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Zimmermann, T., Kunisch, E., Pfeiffer, R., Hirth, A., Stahl, H. D., Sack, U., … Kinne, R. W. (2001). Isolation and characterization of rheumatoid arthritis synovial fibroblasts from primary culture - Primary culture cells markedly differ from fourth-passage cells. Arthritis Research, 3(1), 72–76. https://doi.org/10.1186/ar142

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