Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where John R. McCulloch is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by John R. McCulloch.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 1986

An ultrastructural and immunocytochemical analysis of leptomeningeal and meningioma cultures.

James T. Rutka; Jane R. Giblin; Dolores V. Dougherty; John R. McCulloch; Stephen J. DeArmond; Mark L. Rosenblum

Using immunocytochemical methods, we localized several glycoproteins of the extracellular matrix to leptomeningeal cells and meningiomas in vitro. Three cell lines derived from normal human leptomeninges and seven from meningiomas were studied by indirect immunofluorescence to evaluate the cellular production of fibronectin, laminin, collagen type IV, and procollagen type III. All leptomeningeal cell lines stained intensely and uniformly for all matrix proteins; all meningioma cell cultures stained uniformly, but the intensity of staining varied considerably. After removal of the cells in culture adherent to glass with 25-mM ammonium hydroxide, indirect immunofluorescence demonstrated an exuberant residual extracellular residue enriched with fibronectin, laminin, collagen type IV, and procollagen type III. Electron microscopic examination of all leptomeningeal and meningioma cultures revealed desmosomes and dense tonofilament formation; in addition, granular, filamentous basement membrane-like material was abundant in the extracellular spaces of all cultures. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the cell layer of two leptomeningeal and four meningioma cultures showed production of interstitial collagen types I and III; diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-cellulose chromatography of the medium demonstrated preferential production of procollagen type I. Our findings show conclusively that normal arachnoid cells in vitro synthesize several of the collagen subtypes and may be responsible for the “fibrous response” of the leptomeninges to trauma, infection, or infiltration by tumor. The similarities between leptomeningeal cells and meningiomas demonstrated by electron microscopy and by indirect immunofluorescence support the notion that meningiomas are derived from arachnoid cells. The localization of various mesenchymal glycoproteins within the intra- and extracellular spaces and the ubiquity of specialized intercellular junctions suggest that leptomeningeal cells in culture have the potential to behave like both stromal and epithelial cells.


Acta Neuropathologica | 1987

Establishment and characterization of five cell lines derived from human malignant gliomas.

James T. Rutka; Jane R. Giblin; D. Y. Dougherty; H. C. Liu; John R. McCulloch; Carl W. Bell; Robert S. Stern; Charles B. Wilson; Mark L. Rosenblum

SummaryWe established and characterized five cell lines derived from human malignant gliomas (four glioblastomas multiforme and one highly anaplastic astrocytoma). All cell lines exhibited tumor cell morphology and growth kinetics, and anchorage-independent growth in soft agar. Cytogenetic analysis revealed significant aneuploidy in all five cases as well as clonal chromosomal alterations unique to each cell line. No cell line was tumorigenic in athymic mice. Two of the cell lines were sensitive to carmustine (BCNU) in monolayer and soft-agar cultures. Electron microscopy showed marked variability between cell lines in the number and structure of intracytoplasmic organelles; SF-126 formed collagen fibers in vitro. Immunohistochemical analysis of the surgical specimens showed variable expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) in malignant astrocytes; positive immunostaining for glycoproteins of the extracellular matrix was found predominantly in perivascular regions. In early-passage cultures, only cell line SF-295 expressed GFAP; at establishment, none of the cell lines expressed GFAF or glutamine synthetase. Fibronectin and laminin were expressed by all cell lines in early-passage culture, but expression of these glycoproteins at establishment was variable. Only SF-126 was positively identified by immunostains for procollagen III; this was also the only cell line in which DEAE-cellulose chromatography and SDS-PAGE demonstrated interstitial collagen synthesis. These well-characterized glioma-derived cell lines may now serve as useful tools with which to study the cell biology of gliomas. The synthesis of interstitial collagen by a glioma-derived cell line may suggest a derivation from vascular mesenchymal elements, either reactive or transformed, in the original heterogeneous malignant glioma, rather than from a glial precursor cell.


Developmental Neuroscience | 1987

Characterization of fetal human brain cultures. Development of a potential model for selectively purifying human glial cells in culture.

James T. Rutka; Jane R. Giblin; Ron Balkissoon; Dennis Wen; Craig A. Myatt; John R. McCulloch; Mark L. Rosenblum

Seven fetal human brain and three fetal human leptomeningeal cultures were characterized according to cell morphology, ultrastructural features, antigen expression, and collagen biosynthesis capabilities. Primary cultures derived from mechanically and enzymatically dissociated samples of fetal human brain consisted of a heterogeneous cell population in which astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, neurons, mesenchymal (leptomeningeal) cells, and macrophages were identified by light and electron microscopy. With progressive subcultivation, a homogeneous, leptomeningeal cell-derived population predominated. Fetal human brain and leptomeningeal specimens embedded in paraffin were analyzed immunohistochemically for the distribution of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), vimentin, factor-VIII-related antigen, fibronectin, laminin, type IV collagen, and procollagen III. Only GFAP and vimentin identified astrocytes and radial glia in the developing human brain; fibronectin, laminin, and the collagen types were immunolocalized largely to the leptomeninges and to the cerebral vasculature. The percentage of cells positively identified by antiserum to GFAP was greatest in primary cultures of fetal human brain; by the fourth passage, none of the fetal brain cultures were GFAP positive. The progressive decrease in the percentage of GFAP-positive cells was accompanied by an increase in the percentage of cells identified by collagen immunomarkers. Furthermore, in double immunolabeling experiments, antibodies to GFAP recognized a population of cells that was not identified by antibodies to laminin, fibronectin, type IV collagen, or procollagen III. SDS-PAGE and DEAE-cellulose chromatography of [3H]-proline-labeled early-passage fetal human brain cultures revealed collagen profiles identical to those obtained from direct cultures of the leptomeninges. The characteristics of later-passage fetal human brain cultures were identical in all respects to those of the fetal human leptomeningeal cultures. The proliferation of leptomeningeal cells could be inhibited by exposing the cells to cis-hydroxyproline (200 micrograms/ml). Primary fetal human brain cultures similarly treated with the proline analogue were found to be highly enriched for glial cells; these cultures were more than 90% GFAP positive. We conclude that primary fetal human brain cultures consist of a heterogeneous population of cells, most of which under the present culture conditions can be identified as glial cells. Subcultivation of human fetal brain cultures results in the overgrowth of mesenchymal cells, which are presumably derived from the leptomeninges.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Journal of Ultrastructure Research | 1965

Three-dimensional ultramicrotomy.

John R. McCulloch

A method is described for the routine production of ultrathin sections, cut alternately at right angles to each other. Two separate ribbons of sections are obtained, each being the right-angled complement of the other, and they share a common side along their entire length. Both ribbons can be placed on the same specimen grid for direct electron microscopic comparison of the same ultrastructural components cut in complementary planes. The thickness of the section determines the distance from the common side, which will show the same structures in both ribbons.


International Journal of Cancer | 1988

Effect of retinoids on the proliferation, morphology and expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein of an anaplastic astrocytoma cell line

James T. Rutka; Stephen J. De Armond; Jane R. Giblin; John R. McCulloch; Charles B. Wilson; Mark L. Rosenblum


International Journal of Cancer | 1988

The effects of human recombinant tumor necrosis factor on glioma‐derived cell lines: Cellular proliferation, cytotoxicity, morphological and radioreceptor studies

James T. Rutka; Jane R. Giblin; Michael E. Berens; Enav Bar-Shiv; Kouichi Tokuda; John R. McCulloch; Mark L. Rosenblum; Thomas E. Eessalu; Bharat B. Aogarwal; William J. Bodell


Cancer Research | 1986

Establishment and Characterization of a Cell Line from a Human Gliosarcoma

James T. Rutka; Jane R. Giblin; Hanne K. Høifødt; Dolores V. Dougherty; Carl W. Bell; John R. McCulloch; Richard L. Davis; Charles B. Wilson; Mark L. Rosenblum


Neurosurgery | 1987

Growth of a medulloblastoma on normal leptomeningeal cells in culture: interaction of tumor cells and normal cells

James T. Rutka; Dolores V. Dougherty; Jane R. Giblin; Michael S. B. Edwards; John R. McCulloch; Mark L. Rosenblum


Neurosurgery | 2004

772 Two-year Follow-up on Patients in a Pilot Safety and Efficacy Study of OP-1 (rhBMP-7) in Posterolateral Lumbar Fusion as a Replacement for Iliac Crest Autograft

Dom Coric; Jeffrey S. Fischgrund; Tushar Patel; Alexander R. Vaccaro; Truumees Eeric; Harry N. Herkowitz; Todd J. Albert; Alan S. Hilibrand; Frank M. Phillips; Todd Wetzel; John R. McCulloch


Orthopaedic Proceedings | 2003

ONE YEAR FOLLOW-UP ON PATIENTS IN A PILOT SAFETY AND EFFICACY STUDY OF OP-1 (RHBMP-7) IN POSTEROLATERAL LUMBAR FUSION AS A REPLACEMENT FOR ILIAC CREST AUTOGRAFT

Alexander R. Vaccaro; T.Ch. Patel; Eeric Truumees; Jeffrey Fischgrund; Harry N. Herkowitz; Thomas J. Albert; Alan S. Hilibrand; Frank M. Phillips; Todd Wetzel; John R. McCulloch

Collaboration


Dive into the John R. McCulloch's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jane R. Giblin

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James T. Rutka

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles B. Wilson

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James T. Rutka

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan S. Hilibrand

Thomas Jefferson University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frank M. Phillips

Rush University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge