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Cell
Cultures May Get
Too Much Oxygen In Labs
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Cell biologists may be exposing cell cultures used in laboratory
research to too much oxygen.
The Ohio State University study
making that claim appears online in the January issue of Circulation
Research.
The study says cells act differently
depending on levels of oxygen exposure, and that's especially
true when there's too much oxygen. The study's finding could have
a wide impact on cellular biology research.
The air humans breathe contains
about 21 percent oxygen. Most cell research is done in open air
with the same percentage of oxygen. However, the cells in our
bodies are exposed to oxygen levels in the range of 0.5 percent
to 10 percent.
This study says that means most
cellular biology research is done in conditions that are unnaturally
rich in oxygen. That triggers cell stress, the study says.
The Ohio State researchers exposed
mouse heart cells to normal 21 percent oxygen levels. They found
that cell growth slowed and the cells showed some major physiological
changes, including producing arrays of free radicals and specific
oxygen-sensitive genes.
However, mouse heart cells incubated
at a 3 percent oxygen level remained mobile and continued to grow.
More information
Here's where you can get inside
the cell.
Reference
Source 101
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