| Literature DB >> 18834512 |
Puri Catalina1, Rosa Montes, Gertru Ligero, Laura Sanchez, Teresa de la Cueva, Clara Bueno, Paola E Leone, Pablo Menendez.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) in research is increasing and hESCs hold the promise for many biological, clinical and toxicological studies. Human ESCs are expected to be chromosomally stable since karyotypic changes represent a pitfall for potential future applications. Recently, several studies have analysed the genomic stability of several hESC lines maintained after prolonged in vitro culture but controversial data has been reported. Here, we prompted to compare the chromosomal stability of three hESC lines maintained in the same laboratory using identical culture conditions and passaging methods.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18834512 PMCID: PMC2567976 DOI: 10.1186/1476-4598-7-76
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Figure 1Molecular cytogenetic analysis of HS181 hESC line. HS181 hESC line was genetically stable for 71 passages in feeders. Upon being transferred to feeder-free conditions and split using enzymatic methods, the HS181 hESC line gained a chromosome 12 as early as passage 17 and an additional marker, shown by SKY to be an extra chromosome 20 by passage 21. The level of mosaicism gradually increased from 26% (p17) to 89% (p30). In conventional karyotyping analysis (A) and CGH (C), the blue arrows indicate chromosomal gains. In the SKY images (B), the white arrows confirm the gain of chromosome 12 and characterized the marker seen by G-banding as a partial gain of chromosome 20.
Figure 2Molecular cytogenetic analysis of SHEF-3 hESC line. SHEF-3 hESC line was genetically stable for 51 passages in feeders. Upon being transferred to feeder-free conditions and passaged using enzymatic methods, it quickly gained a trisomy of chromosome 14 as early as in p10. Opposite to the HS181 line, the degree of mosaicism for the extra chromosome 14 did not increase overtime in feeder-free conditions and remained between 23%–36% over the culture (see Table 1). In conventional karyotyping analysis (A), the blue arrows indicate chromosomal gains. B,C: SKY and CGH analyses showing the absence of further structural or numerical abnormalities.
Figure 3Molecular cytogenetic analysis of SHEF-1 hESC line. In contrast to HS181 and SHEF-3 hESC lines, the SHEF-1 hESC line was genetically stable after as many as 185 passages in feeders. Upon being transferred to feeder-free conditions, the SHEF-1 hESC line displayed no karyotypic changes assessed by G-banding (A), SKY (B) and CGH (C) after further 30 passages in feeder-free conditions despite being split by means of enzymatic methods throughout over 215 passages (almost 4 years in in vitro culture). This data suggests that although culture conditions may partially contribute to chromosome stability, some hESC lines are inherently more predisposed than others to karyotypic changes.