Quantitative analysis of rat adipose tissue cell recovery, and non-fat cell volume, in primary cell cultures

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biomedicine, University of Barcelona, Faculty of Biology, Barcelona, Spain
Institute of Biomedicine, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
CIBER OBN, Barcelona, Spain
DOI
10.7287/peerj.preprints.2371v1
Subject Areas
Cell Biology, Metabolic Sciences
Keywords
adipocyte, adipose tissue, stromal cells, cell culture, cell volume, cell viability, primary cell cultures
Copyright
© 2016 Rotondo et al.
Licence
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ Preprints) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
Cite this article
Rotondo F, Romero MdM, Ho-Palma AC, Remesar X, Fernández-López JA, Alemany M. 2016. Quantitative analysis of rat adipose tissue cell recovery, and non-fat cell volume, in primary cell cultures. PeerJ Preprints 4:e2371v1

Abstract

Background. White adipose tissue (WAT) is a complex, disperse, multifunctional organ which contains adipocytes, and a large proportion of fat, but also other cell types, active in defence, regeneration and signalling functions. Studies with adipocytes often require their isolation from WAT breaking up the matrix collagen fibres, but primary cultures of these cells could not be easily correlated to intact WAT, since often recovery and viability are unknown. Experimental design. Epididymal WAT of 4-6 young adult rats was used to isolate adipocytes with collagenase. Careful recording of lipid content of tissue, and all fraction volumes and weights, allowed us to trace the amount of initial WAT fat remaining in the cell preparation. Functionality was estimated by incubation with glucose and measurement of lactate production. Non-adipocyte cells were also recovered and their sizes (and those of adipocytes) were also measured. The presence of non-nucleated cells (erythrocytes) was also estimated. Results. Cell numbers and sizes were correlated from all fractions to intact WAT. Tracing the lipid content, the recovery of adipocytes in the final, metabolically active, preparation was in the range of 70-75%. Adipocytes were 7%, erythrocytes 68% and other stromal (nucleated cells) 24% of total WAT cells. However, their overall volumes were, 91%, 0.05%, and 0.2% of WAT. Non-fat volume of adipocytes was 2.5% of WAT. Conclusions. The methodology presented here allows for a direct quantitative reference to the original tissue of studies using isolated cells. We have found, also, that the "live cell mass" of adipose tissue is very small (about 25 µL/g for adipocytes and 2 µL/g stromal, plus about 1 µL/g blood). This fact, translates into an extremely high (with respect to the actual "live cytoplasm" size) metabolic activity, which make WAT an even more significant agent in the control of energy metabolism.

Author Comment

This is a submission to PeerJ for review.