The osteogenc potential of bone marrow has been proved by experiment. To investigate more in details, bone marrow was obtained from the trochanteric region of femur of NewZealand rabbit in 4 to 8 weeks old. After being cultured in vitro for one week, the hematopoietic component of the bone marrow had disappeared, thus the stromal cells were obtained. Then the stromal cells were subcultured in cultural fluid containing dexamethasone (10-8 mol/L) and natrium glycerophosphate (10mmol/L). Under the phasecontrast microscope, it was found that being cultured for 15 days. The stromal cells were lined up in one layer and late the secretion activity was increased and gradually transformed into multilayer structure and was congregated into diffused opaque clusters in twenty days. During culture, the cells were examined by tetracycline fluorescence label, histochemistry stains, transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis. The results showed that the morphological and biological characteristics of the cultured stromal cells derived from the bone marrow were similiar to those of osteoblasts and could synthesized mineralized new bone tissue in vitro.
Citation: Liu Jingsong,Zeng Caiming,Wang Hongbang,et al.. STUDY ON CULTURE AND OSTEOGENIC POTENTIAL OF STROMAL CELL OF BONE MARROW IN VITRO. Chinese Journal of Reparative and Reconstructive Surgery, 1997, 11(4): 238-241. doi: Copy