Encyclopedia of Experiments
Cancer Research
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Encyclopedia of Experiments Cancer Research
Murine Renal Cell Isolation: A Technique to Isolate and Generate Primary Culture of Renal Tubular Epithelial Cells

Murine Renal Cell Isolation: A Technique to Isolate and Generate Primary Culture of Renal Tubular Epithelial Cells

Transcript

To isolate renal tubular epithelial cells or TECs, begin by taking a freshly isolated mouse kidney in a Petri dish. Peel off the renal capsule – the thin outer layer surrounding the kidney – and remove the medulla or the innermost part of the kidney, leaving the cortex containing the tubule and the tubular epithelial cells.

Mince the remaining kidney parts into small pieces and incubate them in a warm digestion buffer containing the enzyme collagenase. Collagenase breaks down the collagen protein that holds the renal tissues together, releasing the renal tubules and the renal cells into suspension.

Filter the suspension to remove undigested kidney tissues. Next, add pre-chilled culture media to the filtrate. The lower temperature neutralizes collagenase and stops further tissue digestion. Centrifuge the filtrate at low speed to allow the denser tubules and tubular cells to settle while other cell types and impurities remain suspended.

Remove this undesired supernatant fraction and add culture media to resuspend the pellet. Seed the suspension in a collagen-coated culture dish and incubate. The free tubular cells attach firmly to the collagen while the tubules remain suspended. Sub-culture to remove the unattached tubules and obtain the primary culture of tubular epithelial cells.

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