| Literature DB >> 22358861 |
K Lundstrom1, D Rotmann, D Hermann, E J Schlaeger.
Abstract
Semliki Forest virus vectors (SFV) have been developed for efficient transgene expression to result in high receptor yields(50-200 pmol receptor/mg protein) in a variety of mammalian host cells. Transfer of the SFV technology to mammalian cells growing in suspension cultures has made it feasible to produce hundreds of milligrams of receptor proteins in a short time. Large-scale production, however, raises the questions of the safety of handling virally infected cells for down-stream processing. Analysis of cell culture medium and SFV-infected cells revealed that some infectious particles were still present. Replacement of virus-containing medium at 2 h post-infection efficiently removed the majority of infectious replication-deficient SFV particles. Washes with PBS further reduced the number of infectious particles significantly both in the medium and associated with cells to levels that allowed safe handling of SFV-infected cells outside the cell culture facility for biochemical, pharmacological, or electrophysiological assays or down-stream processes in connection to receptor purification. Furthermore, engineering of novel temperature-sensitive mutant SFV vectors resulted in temperature-controlled transgene expression, which completely eliminates the risk of contaminating laboratory personnel.Entities:
Year: 2001 PMID: 22358861 PMCID: PMC3449704 DOI: 10.1023/A:1013171905908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytotechnology ISSN: 0920-9069 Impact factor: 2.058