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  • Heart myocytes  (2)
  • Heart  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 151 (1977), S. 341-350 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Heart myocytes ; Trypsin ; Dedifferentiation ; Tissue culture ; Intercalated disk
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Loss of maturation features is demonstrated for 8-day-old chick embryo heart myocytes, once they have been completely dissociated by trypsin. In support of this statement a total of 65 sections of six isolated cells, fixed while still spherical or during early flattening, were examined under the electron microscope. Trypsin-separated heart muscle cells, even though originating from already differentiated embryonic heart tissue, can therefore in principle be used for differentiation experiments in culture. However, the same cell suspensions also yielded an appreciable quantity of nonisolated cells. In such cell complexes, one can find areas showing well-ordered fibrils and intercalated disks. From 27 sections of a cell pair incidentally transferred into culture undissociated and then fixed while still in the globular state, the fourth and fifth sections, starting from the substrate side of the culture, showed an intercalated disk. Because of its small diameter, this cell complex would hardly have been retainable by a gauze with meshes likely to allow passage of only single cells. Thus the availability of differentiation experiments in culture, starting with already differentiated heart tissue, is restricted to cases where, in a selected territory, each cell has been established without doubt as isolated.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Heart myocytes ; Glycogen ; Tissue culture ; Identification
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung Bei einer korrespondierenden Betrachtung dreier „Asphaltflecke“ von lebenden Herzmuskelzellen in der Kultur und den identischen Stellen im Elektronenmikroskop erweist sich der Fleckeninhalt als eine Anhäufung locker beieinanderliegender β-Teilchen des Glykogens. Präparate für die elektronenmikroskopische Untersuchung konnten hergestellt werden, nachdem der schweren Fixierbarkeit des Fleckeninhaltes mit der Verwendung des Glutaraldehyds in Kakodylatpuffer und der Spülung mit 50%igem Alkohol nach der Reynold'schen Kontrastierung Rechnung getragen war. Mit dieser Diagnose ist zugleich bewiesen, daß Glykogen im Phasenkontrastbild der lebenden Zelle sichtbar werden kann.
    Notes: Summary The contents of three “asphalt coloured spots” previously examined in the living heart muscle cells in a culture by a phase contrast microscope and subsequently identified in the electron microscope by the method of Gross and Riedel proved to be accumulations of β-particles of glycogen loosely lying together. Suitable sections could be manufactured for electron microscope after complying with the difficulty of the spot contents to be fixated — revealed during the histochemical investigations. One had to use glutaraldehyde in cacodylate buffer as the first fixative and 50% alcohol instead of distilled water for rinsing after the Reynold's staining. By this diagnosis at the same time, it is proven that certain glycogen formations in living cells are visible under phase contrast.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 178 (1977), S. 483-494 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Heart ; Ultrastructural maturation ; Tissue culture ; Intercalated disc ; Maturation factor
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The question of whether mechanical moments participate in ultrastructural development of the heart cannot be decided by examining heart tissue samples during embryonic life, for during maturation processes in vivo mechanical factors are always present. The significance of mechanical moments can only be investigated in a system which allows a distinction to be made between pulsations of heart myocytes under conditions of contraction against and under conditions of contraction without mechanical stress. This double possibility is provided by cell culture. An example in which mechanical influences are absent are the so-called “minihearts”; these are cell agglomerations which are detached from the culture substrate. Their cell contractions do not act against any mechanical resistance. In the electron microscope they show abundant filaments, Z-line material and membrane specializations. The highest degree of development, however, does not exceed that characterizing the cells with which the cultures were started. Even some dedifferentiation and degeneration are apparent in the minihearts. No intercalated discs can be found even after 12 weeks, provided that the culture had been started with really isolated cells. The representatives in culture of a myocyte's connection with the heart's mechanical action are the cords, along which attached points alternate with free strands. The pulsation of these strands is restrained during each contraction by their ends, which are fixed on the culture substrate. Thus, the myocytes contract against a resistance, and in this respect their pulsations resemble those of the heart, in which the myocytes' contraction acts against the pressure of the blood. The myocyte culture under these mechanical condition, after a culture time of 10 weeks, produces electron micrographs of mature cells with reduced cytoplasm, aligned mitochondria and fibrils and intercalated discs.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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