4.4 Article

Ex Vivo Culture of Primary Human Fallopian Tube Epithelial Cells

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 51, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/2728

Keywords

Cellular Biology; Issue 51; Primary human epithelial cells; ovarian cancer; serous; ex-vivo; cell biology; fallopian tube; fimbria

Funding

  1. NIH/National Cancer Institute [P50 CA105009, K08 CA108748, U01 CA152990]
  2. Ovarian Cancer Research Fund
  3. May Kay Foundation
  4. Novartis Pharmaceuticals
  5. Robert and Deborah First Fund
  6. Randi and Joel Cutler Ovarian Cancer Research Fund
  7. Marsha Rivkin Foundation - Scientific Scholar Award
  8. AACR - George and Patricia Sehl Fellowship for Cancer Genetics Research
  9. American Physician Fellowship for Medicine in Israel - Claire and Emmanuel G. Rosenblatt Foundation

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Epithelial ovarian cancer is a leading cause of female cancer mortality in the United States. In contrast to other women-specific cancers, like breast and uterine carcinomas, where death rates have fallen in recent years, ovarian cancer cure rates have remained relatively unchanged over the past two decades (1). This is largely due to the lack of appropriate screening tools for detection of early stage disease where surgery and chemotherapy are most effective (2,) (3). As a result, most patients present with advanced stage disease and diffuse abdominal involvement. This is further complicated by the fact that ovarian cancer is a heterogeneous disease with multiple histologic subtypes (4, 5). Serous ovarian carcinoma (SOC) is the most common and aggressive subtype and the form most often associated with mutations in the BRCA genes. Current experimental models in this field involve the use of cancer cell lines and mouse models to better understand the initiating genetic events and pathogenesis of disease (6, 7). Recently, the fallopian tube has emerged as a novel site for the origin of SOC, with the fallopian tube (FT) secretory epithelial cell (FTSEC) as the proposed cell of origin (8, 9). There are currently no cell lines or culture systems available to study the FT epithelium or the FTSEC. Here we describe a novel ex vivo culture system where primary human FT epithelial cells are cultured in a manner that preserves their architecture, polarity, immunophenotype, and response to physiologic and genotoxic stressors. This ex vivo model provides a useful tool for the study of SOC, allowing a better understanding of how tumors can arise from this tissue, and the mechanisms involved in tumor initiation and progression.

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