Bioengineering (Nov 2021)

Heat-Inactivation of Fetal and Newborn Sera Did Not Impair the Expansion and Scaffold Engineering Potentials of Fibroblasts

  • Félix-Antoine Pellerin,
  • Christophe Caneparo,
  • Ève Pellerin,
  • Stéphane Chabaud,
  • Martin Pelletier,
  • Stéphane Bolduc

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering8110184
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. 184

Abstract

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Heat inactivation of bovine sera is routinely performed in cell culture laboratories. Nevertheless, it remains debatable whether it is still necessary due to the improvement of the production process of bovine sera. Do the benefits balance the loss of many proteins, such as hormones and growth factors, that are very useful for cell culture? This is even truer in the case of tissue engineering, the processes of which is often very demanding. This balance is examined here, from nine populations of fibroblasts originating from three different organs, by comparing the capacity of adhesion and proliferation of cells, their metabolism, and the capacity to produce the stroma; their histological appearance, thickness, and mechanical properties were also evaluated. Overall, serum inactivation does not appear to provide a significant benefit.

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