JoVE Logo

Sign In

A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content.

Preparing a Single-Cell Suspension of Immune Cells from Murine Brain Tissue

-- views • 1:24 min

Transcript

Begin with a murine brain with neural, non-neural, and immune cells within the brain's extracellular matrix or ECM.

Mince the tissue and resuspend it in a culture medium.

Transfer these tissue fragments to a tube and treat them with collagenase and DNase-I enzymes.

Collagenase digests the ECM, releasing individual cells, while DNase-I degrades free DNA to prevent cell clumping.

Then, add EDTA to inactivate the collagenase enzymes.

Add a culture medium. Centrifuge and remove the supernatant.

Add a density gradient solution and the culture medium to the cell pellet, creating a low-density gradient layer.

Mix and then underlay the solution with a high-density gradient solution to establish a density difference.

Centrifuge at low speed to separate immune cells at the interface, with lighter cell debris at the top and heavier neuronal and glial cells at the bottom.

Remove the upper layer, and collect the immune cells, and transfer them to another tube.

Centrifuge and remove the supernatant, then resuspend the cells in a medium, forming a single-cell suspension for downstream applications.

article

02:27

Preparing a Single-Cell Suspension of Immune Cells from Murine Brain Tissue

Related Videos

64 Views

article

05:58

Preparation of Single-cell Suspensions for Cytofluorimetric Analysis from Different Mouse Skin Regions

Related Videos

18.2K Views

article

10:21

Characterization and Isolation of Mouse Primary Microglia by Density Gradient Centrifugation

Related Videos

19.1K Views

article

09:01

Flow Cytometric Analysis of Lymphocyte Infiltration in Central Nervous System during Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis

Related Videos

7.0K Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved