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Rat Renal Mesangial Cells (RRMC)

SKU: 10RA-030

Rat Renal Mesangial Cells (RRMC)

SKU: 10RA-030
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Description

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Product Description

Renal mesangial cells are perivascular cells located within the central portion of the glomerular tuft between capillary loops, constituting 30-40% of the total glomerular cell population [1]. They regulate the intraglomerular capillary flow and ultrafiltration surface via mesangial cell contraction and release of growth factors and vasoactive agents [2]. By pinocytosis and phagocytosis, mesangial cells remove local accumulation of macromolecules in the mesangial space [3]. Mesangial cells also synthesize, assemble and control turnover of the mesangial matrix. Overproduction of mesangial cells has been observed in various glomerular diseases, such as IgA nephropathy, mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis, lupus nephritis, glomerulosclerosis and diabetic nephropathy [4]. Such critical involvements suggest renal mesangial cells are an ideal model for studying mesangial injury and glomerular functions under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions.

iXCells Biotechnologies provides high quality Rat Renal Mesangial Cells (RRMC), which are isolated from postnatal day 2 rat kidney and cryopreserved at P1, with >0.5 million cells in each vial. RRMC express fibronectin, Thy-1, and smooth muscle actin. They are negative for mycoplasma, bacteria, yeast, and fungi and can further expand for 5 population doublings in Mesangial Cell Growth Medium (Cat# MD-0051) under the condition suggested by iXCells Biotechnologies.

Product Details

Tissue Postnatal day 2 rat kidney
Package Size 0.5 millioncells/vial
Passage Number P1
Shipped Cryopreserved
Storage Liquid nitrogen
Growth Properties Adherent
Media Mesangial Cell Growth Medium (Cat# MD-0051)

References

[1] Olivetti G, Anversa P, Rigamonti W, et al. (1977) J Cell Biol. 75(2 Pt 1):573-85.

[2] Couchman JR, Beavan LA and McCarthy KJ. (1994) Kidney Int. 45:328-35.

[3] Riser BL, Cortes P, Heilig C, et al. (1996) Am J Pathol. 148:1915-23.

[4] Gruden G, Thomas S, Burt D, et al. (1999) J Am Soc Nephrol 10:730-37.

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