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Isolation and culture of functional adult human neurons from neurosurgical brain specimens
Author(s) -
Thomas Park,
Patrick Schweder,
Kevin Lee,
Birger Victor Dieriks,
Yewon Jung,
Leon Smyth,
Justin Rustenhoven,
Edward Mee,
Peter Heppner,
Clinton Turner,
Maurice A. Curtis,
Richard L. M. Faull,
Johanna M. Montgomery,
Michael Dragunow
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
brain communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2632-1297
DOI - 10.1093/braincomms/fcaa171
Subject(s) - neuroscience , human brain , neurophysiology , biology , slice preparation , electrophysiology
The ability to characterize and study primary neurons isolated directly from the adult human brain would greatly advance neuroscience research. However, significant challenges such as accessibility of human brain tissue and the lack of a robust neuronal cell culture protocol have hampered its progress. Here, we describe a simple and reproducible method for the isolation and culture of functional adult human neurons from neurosurgical brain specimens . In vitro , adult human neurons form a dense network and express a plethora of mature neuronal and synaptic markers. Most importantly, for the first time, we demonstrate the re-establishment of mature neurophysiological properties in vitro , such as repetitive fast-spiking action potentials, and spontaneous and evoked synaptic activity. Together, our dissociated and slice culture systems enable studies of adult human neurophysiology and gene expression under normal and pathological conditions and provide a high-throughput platform for drug testing on brain cells directly isolated from the adult human brain.

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