Five-in-One: Simultaneous isolation of multiple major liver cell types from livers of normal and NASH mice

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Abstract

NASH is a chronic liver disease that affects 3%–6% of individuals and requires urgent therapeutic developments. Isolating the key cell types in the liver is a necessary step towards understanding their function and roles in disease pathogenesis. However, traditional isolation methods through gradient centrifugation can only collect one or a few cell types simultaneously and pose technical difficulties when applied to NASH livers. Taking advantage of identified cell surface markers from liver single-cell RNAseq, here we established the combination of gradient centrifugation and antibody-based cell sorting techniques to isolate five key liver cell types (hepatocytes, endothelial cells, stellate cells, macrophages and other immune cells) from a single mouse liver. This method yielded high purity of each cell type from healthy and NASH livers. Our five-in-one protocol simultaneously isolates key liver cell types with high purity under normal and NASH conditions, enabling for systematic and accurate exploratory experiments such as RNA sequencing.

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Zhou, Y., Adewale, F., Kim, S., Su, Q., Glass, D., Sleeman, M. W., … Cheng, X. (2021). Five-in-One: Simultaneous isolation of multiple major liver cell types from livers of normal and NASH mice. Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, 25(20), 9878–9883. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcmm.16933

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