Magnetic-activated cell sorting for the fast and efficient separation of human and rodent Schwann cells from mixed cell populations

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Abstract

To date, magnetic-activated cell sorting (MACS) remains a powerful method to isolate distinct cell populations based on differential cell surface labeling. Optimized direct and indirect MACS protocols for cell immunolabeling are presented here as methods to divest Schwann cell (SC) cultures of contaminating cells (specifically, fibroblast cells) and isolate SC populations at different stages of differentiation. This chapter describes (1) the preparation of single-cell suspensions from established human and rat SC cultures, (2) the design and application of cell selection strategies using SC-specific (p75NGFR, O4, and O1) and fibroblast-specific (Thy-1) markers, and (3) the characterization of both the pre- and post-sorting cell populations. A simple protocol for the growth of hybridoma cell cultures as a source of monoclonal antibodies for cell surface immunolabeling of SCs and fibroblasts is provided as a cost-effective alternative for commercially available products. These steps allow for the timely and efficient recovery of purified SC populations without compromising the viability and biological activity of the cells.

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Ravelo, K. M., Andersen, N. D., & Monje, P. V. (2018). Magnetic-activated cell sorting for the fast and efficient separation of human and rodent Schwann cells from mixed cell populations. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1739, pp. 87–109). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7649-2_6

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