Cell lines or purified cell suspensions are a valuable tool to
Cells grown in culture or obtained ex-vivo can be easily cytospun or smeared on a slide. However conditions are quite different from a tissue block, fixed and embedded in paraffin.provide known positive controls provide homogeneous tissue in unlimited amount, characterizable by molecular, cytogenetic and biochemical means provide models for ex-vivo cell cycle and activation-dependent effects
Live cell preparation.
Prepare 1% Agarose, cell culture grade, in isoosmotic
PBS. You need to boil to dissolve it in PBS. Check for loss of water as
vapor during boiling and replace with distilled water.
Bring to approx 50 C°. The agar solidify below this
point.
Prepare your cells as a cell suspension in minimal amount
of medium, at room temperature.
To make a 0.5 ml agar block you may need between 10 to
20x106 cells. You can scale this down to as little as 0.5 x
106 in 50 µl but your cells will be very sparse on section.
Prepare in advance 1.5 ml Eppendorf tubes (or small PCR
tubes for micro-preparations) to which you cut off and discarded the conical
bottom (!). Cap the tube.
Mix evenly and thoroughly your cells with 0.5 ml of agar
(or less) and very quickly transfer to the capped inverted tube. No bubbles
!! You may want also to cut the pipette tip, so you have a larger opening.
Place the still molten agar and tube on ice until is
solid.
Then open carefully the cap, and gently extract the agar
cylinder from its base (the cap). At this point you can cut the agar piece
in two with a razor blade, freeze half and fix in formalin the other. Your
cells are still alive and biochemically active at this point.
Fixed cell preparation.
Proceed as above, but you fix the cells before. Then
you can use Agarose in PBS, regardless of osmolarity.
Fixing the cells before embedding, prevents movement
of labile antigens or loss of short-lived molecules.
Find
here an example of a cell block preparation.
Tricks.
It is very convenient to have on the same block a positive
and a negative control, but how to distinguish two semi-transparent block
of agar and identical-looking cells? Put a tiny amount of India Ink (as
your Surgical Pathologist) in the molten agar before embedding the cells.
Must be not more than a faint grey hue, enough to distinguish the block
with naked eye and at the microscope.
You may also want to check a similar cell block technique
at the NIH website.