Three isolation techniques for primary culture of human osteoblast-like cells: A comparison

Abstract
The culture of osteoblast-like cells of human origin has become an important experimental model in bone biology. We report here a comparison and evaluation of three of the most widely used systems available today: bone marrow stroma cell cultures (BMSC), human osteoblast explant cultures (hOB) and osteoblast explant cultures from collagenase-treated bone (hOBcol). Cultures from 16 bone specimens obtained from various donors were established and their expression of the osteoblast phenotype were then compared in secondary cultures by use of biochemical markers. BMSC had the highest basal and 1,25-dihy-droxyvitaminD3 (1,25(OH)2D.))-induced alkaline phosphatase activities in all cell isolations, with levels approximately twice those in explant cultures. Basal osteocalcin secretion was low-to-undetectable in all cell cultures but was detected in 1,25(OH)2D3-stimulated cultures. BMSC produced half of the amount of osteocalcin synthesized in explant cultures. The BMSC cultures also synthesized the lowest amounts of type I collagen, whereas collagen type III synthesis did not differ significantly among the various cultures. When secondary cultures were treated with 100 nM dexam-ethasone in the presence of ascorbic acid (50 u.g/mL) and B-glycerophosphate (10 mM), cultures deposited calcium mineral into the cell layer within 2–4 weeks. PTH-induced cAMP formation was detected in only 5 of 15 isolations and no consistent isolation-dependent response pattern was seen. We conclude that BMSC cultures differ significantly from explant cultures obtained from the same bone specimen. However, all cultures represent cells which can differentiate further and induce mineralization of the extracellular matrix in response to osteoinductive drugs.