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Primary Cells | Product categories | ovaryresearch.com
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Primary Cells

Primary cells are isolated directly from fresh tissues using enzymatic or mechanical dissociation, without any genetic or artificial modification that could alter native physiology. Researchers can maintain these cells in vitro for a limited number of passages before undergoing replicative senescence. Due to their ability to closely mimic in vivo conditions in in vitro cell culture, primary cells are the gold standard for drug discovery, toxicology screening, disease modeling, and regenerative medicine research.

Our primary cells category encompasses various cell types of human primary cells and animal primary cells, including epithelial cells, fibroblasts, endothelial cells, neurons, stromal cells, immune cells, and more. Human primary cells (also termed primary human cells) are available from various human tissues and biosystems.

Within the digestive system subcategory, you may find primary liver cells, such as human primary hepatocytes. These primary human hepatocytes retain donor-specific metabolic enzyme activities, making them useful research models for drug metabolism and clearance studies. Other animal primary cell models include primary mouse hepatocytes.

Within the immune system subcategory, you can find immune cells of both myeloid and lymphoid lineages, derived from bone marrow, peripheral blood, and other immune tissues. Myeloid-lineage cells include monocytes and their differentiated forms, such as macrophages, including primary human macrophages. Primary human macrophages are used to model inflammatory responses, phagocytosis, and cytokine release. Lymphoid-lineage cells include natural killer cells, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes.

For neuroscience research, both neurons and glia cells serve as valuable cell models for studying nervous system function and disease. Primary human neurons are essential for studying neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Human primary neurons are also used in research on synaptic function, axonal transport, and neuronal network formation. Primary astrocytes, as a type of glial cell, are widely used to study neuronal support, neuroinflammation, blood-brain barrier support and regulation, and CNS injury responses.

This primary cell category also includes primary cell lines (referred to as finite cell lines or finite-life cell strains). These cells have extended but limited lifespan and retain many characteristics and functions of primary cells. Proper culture of these finite cell lines is critical to maintain phenotype, marker expression, and genetic stability. A typical primary cell line of fibroblasts undergos a limited number of population doublings, often approximately 40-60 (e.g., BJ, WI-38), before reaching cellular senescence.

In addition to human primary cells, Ascent Research also provides primary cells from multiple animal species: mouse primary cells (murine), rat cells, dog cells (canine), chicken cells, porcine cells, monkey cells, and cynomolgus monkey cells (cyno cells) for translational research. These animal-derived primary cells support comparative biology, disease modeling, and translational research.

Ascent Research supports a broad portfolio including epithelial cells, endothelial cells, microvascular endothelial cells, muscle cells, fibroblasts, adipocytes, keratinocytes, immune cells, mesenchymal cells, pericytes, neurons, and glial cells. Researchers seeking to buy human primary cells should prioritize low-passage, well-characterized products with donor information, as these factors help support experimental consistency and biological relevance.

Showing 12 of 1209 results

Sheep Pulmonary Artery Smooth Muscle Cells

Research on the Sheep Pulmonary Artery Smooth Muscle Cells is essential to the study of pulmonary arterial hypertension, chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension, hypoxia-induced vascular remodeling,…
Cat. No. ARP0944

Sheep Pulmonary Artery Endothelial Cells

Research on the Sheep Pulmonary Artery Endothelial Cells is essential to the study of acute lung injury, pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary edema, pulmonary embolism, pulmonary artery…
Cat. No. ARP0943

Sheep Pulmonary Microvascular Endothelial Cells

Research on the Sheep Pulmonary Microvascular Endothelial Cells is essential to the study of acute lung injury, pulmonary hypertension, edema, embolism, and lung cancer development.…
Cat. No. ARP0942

Pig Bronchial Epithelial Cells

Research on the Pig Bronchial Epithelial Cells is essential to the study of asthma, chronic bronchitis, cystic fibrosis, bronchial dysplasia, and respiratory viral infections (e.g.,…
Cat. No. ARP0941

Pig Tracheal Epithelial Cells

Research on the Pig Tracheal Epithelial Cells is essential to the study of tracheal stenosis, primary ciliary dyskinesia, tracheobronchopathia osteochondroplastica, chronic tracheitis, and post-intubation injury.…
Cat. No. ARP0940

Pig Skeletal Muscle Fibroblasts

Research on the Pig Skeletal Muscle Fibroblasts is essential to the study of fibrotic myopathies, post-injury scar formation, muscular dystrophy models, and tendon-muscle interface healing…
Cat. No. ARP0939

Pig Sertoli Cells

Research on the Pig Sertoli Cells is essential to the study of male reproductive disorders such as testicular germ-cell cancer, cryptorchidism, hypospadias, and low sperm…
Cat. No. ARP0938

Pig Thymic Fibroblasts

Research on the Pig Thymic Fibroblasts is essential to the study of normal thymus morphogenesis, lymphopoiesis, thymic involution, autoimmune dysregulation, and T-cell maturation defects. The…
Cat. No. ARP0936

Pig Pancreatic Ductal Epithelial Cells

Research on the Pig Pancreatic Ductal Epithelial Cells is essential to the study of ductal obstruction, cystic fibrosis-related pancreatic disease, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) models,…
Cat. No. ARP0935

Pig Ureteral Fibroblasts

Research on the Pig Ureteral Fibroblasts is essential to the study of ureteral fibrosis, periureteral scar formation, retroperitoneal fibrosis, and post-surgical stricture development. The ureter…
Cat. No. ARP0934

Pig Pancreatic Acinar Epithelial Cells

Research on the Pig Pancreatic Acinar Epithelial Cells is essential to the study of acute pancreatitis, chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic acinar-to-ductal metaplasia, and pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia…
Cat. No. ARP0933

Pig B Lymphocytes

Research on the Pig B Lymphocytes is essential to the study of autoimmune diseases (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis models), B-cell lymphoma, immunodeficiency disorders, chronic graft-versus-host disease…
Cat. No. ARP0932

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