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  • Murine Precision-Cut Liver Slices as an Ex Vivo Model of Liver Biology

    Author(s)
    Pearen, Michael A
    Lim, Hong Kiat
    Gratte, Francis D
    Fernandez-Rojo, Manuel A
    Nawaratna, Sujeevi K
    Gobert, Geoffrey N
    Olynyk, John K
    Tirnitz-Parker, Janina EE
    Ramm, Grant A
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Nawaratna, Sujeevi S.
    Year published
    2020
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Understanding the mechanisms of liver injury, hepatic fibrosis, and cirrhosis that underlie chronic liver diseases (i.e., viral hepatitis, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, metabolic liver disease, and liver cancer) requires experimental manipulation of animal models and in vitro cell cultures. Both techniques have limitations, such as the requirement of large numbers of animals for in vivo manipulation. However, in vitro cell cultures do not reproduce the structure and function of the multicellular hepatic environment. The use of precision-cut liver slices is a technique in which uniform slices of viable mouse liver are ...
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    Understanding the mechanisms of liver injury, hepatic fibrosis, and cirrhosis that underlie chronic liver diseases (i.e., viral hepatitis, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, metabolic liver disease, and liver cancer) requires experimental manipulation of animal models and in vitro cell cultures. Both techniques have limitations, such as the requirement of large numbers of animals for in vivo manipulation. However, in vitro cell cultures do not reproduce the structure and function of the multicellular hepatic environment. The use of precision-cut liver slices is a technique in which uniform slices of viable mouse liver are maintained in laboratory tissue culture for experimental manipulation. This technique occupies an experimental niche that exists between animal studies and in vitro cell culture methods. The presented protocol describes a straightforward and reliable method to isolate and culture precision-cut liver slices from mice. As an application of this technique, ex vivo liver slices are treated with bile acids to simulate cholestatic liver injury and ultimately assess the mechanisms of hepatic fibrogenesis.
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    Journal Title
    Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE)
    Volume
    2020
    Issue
    157
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.3791/60992
    Subject
    Biochemistry and cell biology
    Psychology
    Cognitive and computational psychology
    Science & Technology
    Multidisciplinary Sciences
    Science & Technology - Other Topics
    Medicine
    Issue 157
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/396787
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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