Sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus immune cells in culture: Formulation of the appropriate harvesting and culture media and maintenance conditions

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Abstract

The sea urchin is an emergent model system for studying basic and translational immunology. Here we report a new method for the harvesting and maintenance of primary immune cells isolated from adult Paracentrotus lividus, a common Mediterranean sea urchin species. This optimised method uses coelomocyte culture medium, containing a high-affinity Ca 2+ chelator, as the ideal harvesting and anti-clotting vehicle and short-term culture medium (≤48 h), and artificial seawater as the master medium that maintains cell survival and in vitro-ex vivo physiological homeostasis over 2 weeks. Gradually reducing the amount of anticoagulant solution in the medium and regularly replacing the medium led to improved culture viability. Access to a robust and straightforward in vitro-ex vivo system will expedite our understanding of deuterostome immunity as well as underscore the potential of sea urchin with respect to biomedicine and regulatory testing.

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Pinsino, A., & Alijagic, A. (2019). Sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus immune cells in culture: Formulation of the appropriate harvesting and culture media and maintenance conditions. Biology Open, 8(3). https://doi.org/10.1242/bio.039289

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