13 February 2013 9 7K Report

I'm infecting human macrophages with an intracellular bacteria and I have performed the infection always under serum-free conditions. I differentiate the macrophages from blood CD14+ monocytes culturing them during 5 days in RPMI 10% FBS and M-CSF. After differentiation, I always discard supernatant and replace it with the bacteria diluted on serum-free RPMI, spin to synchronize infection, and then measure cytokine production at early times (6h). As I want to do a more extended kinetic, I'm worried about the health of the macrophages under serum-free conditions during this prolonged time (up to 48h), as I don't want to have cytokines in the supernatants as a product of apoptotic events. I'm thinking to develop the infection in RPMI 1%FBS, and I want to know if somebody has experience about the effect of serum in cytokine production using in vitro models of infection.

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