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  2. Cell culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_culture

    Cell culture is a fundamental component of tissue culture and tissue engineering, as it establishes the basics of growing and maintaining cells in vitro. The major application of human cell culture is in stem cell industry, where mesenchymal stem cells can be cultured and cryopreserved for future use. Tissue engineering potentially offers ...

  3. Microcarrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcarrier

    Microcarrier cell culture, however, was the breakthrough required for cell culture to reach industrial and clinical significance. [2] Studies have shown that microcarrier suspensions, compared to multi-layer vessel culture, improve cell yield by 80-fold at only ten percent of Good Manufacturing Practice space, and only sixty percent of the ...

  4. Tissue culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissue_culture

    The third method is cell culture, of which there are three types: (1) precursor cell culture, i.e. undifferentiated cells that are to be differentiate, (2) differentiated cell culture, i.e. completely differentiated cells that have lost the capacity to further differentiate, and (3) stem cell culture, i.e. undifferentiated cells that can ...

  5. Chemically defined medium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemically_defined_medium

    Standard cell culture media commonly consist of a basal medium supplemented with animal serum (such as fetal bovine serum, FBS) as a source of nutrients and other ill-defined factors. The technical disadvantages to using serum include its undefined nature, batch-to-batch variability in composition, and the risk of contamination.

  6. Tissue engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissue_engineering

    Micro-mass cultures of C3H-10T1/2 cells at varied oxygen tensions stained with Alcian blue. A commonly applied definition of tissue engineering, as stated by Langer [3] and Vacanti, [4] is "an interdisciplinary field that applies the principles of engineering and life sciences toward the development of biological substitutes that restore, maintain, or improve [Biological tissue] function or a ...

  7. Adherent culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adherent_Culture

    Cells are adhered to the media that was not removed in a culture vessel, and a series of wash and incubation steps are then necessary to detach the cells. For the wash steps, a balanced salt solution is poured to the side opposite the cell culture, and the culture vessel is then shaken before draining the balanced salt solution.

  8. 3D cell culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3D_cell_culture

    A 3D cell culture is an artificially created environment in which biological cells are permitted to grow or interact with their surroundings in all three dimensions. Unlike 2D environments (e.g. a Petri dish), a 3D cell culture allows cells in vitro to grow in all directions, similar to how they would in vivo. [1]

  9. Somatic embryogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatic_embryogenesis

    Certain compounds excreted by plant tissue cultures and found in culture media have been shown necessary to coordinate cell division and morphological changes. [9] These compounds have been identified by Chung et al. [ 10 ] as various polysaccharides , amino acids , growth regulators , vitamins , low molecular weight compounds and polypeptides.