| Literature DB >> 25890180 |
Nina Desai1, Pooja Rambhia2, Arsela Gishto3.
Abstract
Human embryonic stem cells (hESC) have emerged as attractive candidates for cell-based therapies that are capable of restoring lost cell and tissue function. These unique cells are able to self-renew indefinitely and have the capacity to differentiate in to all three germ layers (ectoderm, endoderm and mesoderm). Harnessing the power of these pluripotent stem cells could potentially offer new therapeutic treatment options for a variety of medical conditions. Since the initial derivation of hESC lines in 1998, tremendous headway has been made in better understanding stem cell biology and culture requirements for maintenance of pluripotency. The approval of the first clinical trials of hESC cells for treatment of spinal cord injury and macular degeneration in 2010 marked the beginning of a new era in regenerative medicine. Yet it was clearly recognized that the clinical utility of hESC transplantation was still limited by several challenges. One of the most immediate issues has been the exposure of stem cells to animal pathogens, during hESC derivation and during in vitro propagation. Initial culture protocols used co-culture with inactivated mouse fibroblast feeder (MEF) or human feeder layers with fetal bovine serum or alternatively serum replacement proteins to support stem cell proliferation. Most hESC lines currently in use have been exposed to animal products, thus carrying the risk of xeno-transmitted infections and immune reaction. This mini review provides a historic perspective on human embryonic stem cell culture and the evolution of new culture models. We highlight the challenges and advances being made towards the development of xeno-free culture systems suitable for therapeutic applications.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25890180 PMCID: PMC4351689 DOI: 10.1186/s12958-015-0005-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Biol Endocrinol ISSN: 1477-7827 Impact factor: 5.211
Feeder-free culture systems using extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins or biological substrates
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| hESC | MEF –CM4 (basal medium DMEM+ KSR5) bFGF | Y | N | N | 180 days | [ |
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| hESC/ | DMEM/F12 | Y | N | N | 20 passages | [ |
| hiPSC | Dorsomorphin, IWP-2, bFGF,, TGF-β1, Activin | ||||||
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| hESC | TeSR2 | Y | Y | Y | 20 passages | [ |
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| hESC | DMEM/KSR | Y | N | N | >47 passages | [ |
| bFGF,, TGF-β1 (+/− LIF) | >180 days | ||||||
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| hESC | DMEM/KSR | Y | N | N | >20 passages | [ |
| bFGF, Activin | |||||||
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| hESc | TeSR1 | Y | N | Y | 11–25 passages | [ |
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| hESC | XF medium -Human plasma extract, with DMEM/F12 base, bFGF, TGFβ | N | N | Y | 39 passages | [ |
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| hESC/ | MEF –CM (basal medium DMEM+ KSR5) | N | N | N | 10 passages | [ |
| hiPSC | |||||||
| bFGF | |||||||
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| hESC/ | mTeSR1, | Y | N | N | [ | |
| hiPSC | StemPro, | Y | N | N | 10–30 passages | ||
| TeSR2 | Y | Y | Y | ||||
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| hESC | mTeSR1 | Y | N | N | >90 days | [ |
| hiPSC | |||||||
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| hESC | TeSR1 | Y | N | Y | 20 passages | [ |
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| hESC | mTeSR1, | Y | N | N | 35 passages | [ |
| hiPSC | TeSR2, | Y | Y | Y | 12–15 passages | ||
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| hESC | mTeSR1 | Y | N | N | 10 passages | [ |
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| hESC | E8 medium | Y | Y | Y | >25 passages | [ |
| hiPSC | |||||||
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| hESC | DMEM/F12 +/− bFGF | Y | Y | Y | >24 passages | [ |
| Wnt/ID8 | |||||||
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| hESC/ | E8 medium | Y | Y | Y | >30 passages | [ |
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| hESC | MEF-CM (basal medium DMEM//KSR) | Y | N | N | 14 days | [ |
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| bFGF | Y | N | N | 19 days | ||
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| hESC | DMEM/F12 + KSR + FBS + bFGF | Y | N | N | 21 days | [ |
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| hiPSC | mTeSR1 | Y | N | N | 10 passages | [ |
| ROCK inhibitor | |||||||
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| hESC | DMEM + KSR + bFGF | Y | N | N | >260 days | [ |
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| hESC | mTeSR1 | Y | N | N | >26 days | [ |
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| hESC | Neural basal medium.Neutrodoma-CS | Y | N | Y | >10 weeks | [ |
| bFGF, Activin, Neurotrophins BDNF, NT3, NT4 | |||||||
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| hESC | mTESR1 | Y | N | N | 20–50 passages | [ |
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| hiPSC/ | StemPro | Y | N | N | ||
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| hESC | mTeSR1 | Y | N | N | 25 passages | [ |
| StemPro | Y | N | N | ||||
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| hESC/ | Nutirstem XF/FF | Y | N | Y | >30 passages | [ |
| hiPSC |
1SF serum –free medium.
2CD chemically defined medium (excludes any media containing BSA or HSA fraction due to their unknown and variable composition).
3XF xeno-free, no animal components in medium or culture system.
4MEF-CM mouse embryonic fibroblast conditioned medium.
5KSR knock out serum replacement protein.
Synthetic substrates for hESC culture
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| hESC | X -VIVO 10 | Y | N | Y | >10 passages | [ |
| bFGF,TGF-β1 | |||||||
| Activin A | |||||||
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| hiPSC | mTeSR1 | Y | N | N | 10 passages | [ |
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| hESC | mTESR1 | Y | N | N | 10–20 passages | [ |
| hiPSC | TESR2 | Y | Y | Y | |||
| PSGro | Y | Y | Y | ||||
| Nutristem XF | Y | N | Y | ||||
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| hESC | MEF-CM6 | N | N | N | 25 passages | [ |
| hCCM7 | N | N | Y | ||||
| StemPro, | Y | N | N | ||||
| mTeSR | Y | N | N | ||||
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| hESC | mTeSR1 | Y | N | N | >17 passages | [ |
| Rock inhibitor | |||||||
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| hiPSC | StemPro | Y | N | N | 5 passages | [ |
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| hESC | mTeSR1 | Y | N | N | 20 passages | [ |
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| hESC | DMEM/F12 + KSR | N | N | N | 9 days | [ |
| bFGF | |||||||
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| hESC | KSR-XF 10 | Y | N | Y | 6–14 days | [ |
| BRASTEM, | Y | N | Y | ||||
| bFGF |
1SF serum –free medium.
2CD chemically defined medium (excludes any media containing BSA or HSA fraction due to their unknown and variable composition).
3XF xeno-free, no animal components in medium or culture system.
4Synthemax acrylate surface coated with peptide derived from vitronectin.
5PMEDSAH Poly [2-(methacryloyloxy) ethyl dimethyl-(3-sulfopropyl) ammonium hydroxide]—.
6MEF-CM mouse embryonic fibroblast conditioned medium.
7Human cell conditioned medium.
8PMVE-alt-MA poly (methyl vinyl ether-alt-maleic anhydride.
9APMAAm aminopropylmethacrylamide—.
10Hillex polystyrene beads modified with cationic trimethyl ammonium.
Commercially available serum-free media for hESC and hiPSC culture
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| Cell Science & Technology | ESF basal medium// FAF-BSA conjugated with oleic acid | N | N |
| FGF-2, LIF, insulin, transferrin, selenium, ascorbic acid, β-mercaptoethanol | ||||
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| Stemcell Technologies (#05850) | DMEM/F12/BSA | N | N |
| bFGF, TGFβ, insulin, transferrin, cholesterol, lipids, pipecolic acid, GABA, β-mercaptoethanol | ||||
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| Stemcell Technologies | DMEM/F12 /HSA | Y | N |
| bFGF, TGFβ, insulin, transferrin, cholesterol, lipids, pipecolic acid, GABA, β-mercaptoethanol | ||||
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| Stemcell Technologies (#05860) | DMEM/F12 // with recombinant HSA | Y | Y |
| bFGF, TGFβ, insulin, transferrin, cholesterol, lipids, pipecolic acid, GABA, β-mercaptoethanol | ||||
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| Stemcell Technologies (#05940) | DMEM/F12 | Y | Y |
| bFGF, TGFβ, insulin, transferrin, selenium, ascorbic acid | ||||
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| Stemcell Technologies (#05940) | Medium based on E8 formulation | Y | Y |
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| Stemgent (#010005) | Basal medium/ HSA | Y | N |
| bFGF, TGFβ, insulin, transferrin | ||||
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| Life Technologies (#A1000701) | DMEM/F12/BSA | N | N |
| bFGF, TGFβ, Activin, transferrin, LR3-IGF1, HRG1β | ||||
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| Lonza (#04380Q) | Basal medium/ HSA-pharmaceutical grade purification | Y | Y |
| bFGF, hFLT3, transferrin, β-mercaptoethanol | ||||
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| Roche (11363743001) | Neural basal medium.Neutrodoma-CS/HSA | Y | N |
| bFGF, Activin, Neurotrophins | ||||
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| Millipore (#SCM130) | DMEM//F12, HSA | Y | N |
| Activin-A, TGFβ1, b-FGF, lipids, insulin, transferrin, selenium | ||||
| dorsomorphin (DM), IWP-2 | ||||
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| GE healthcare life sciences (#SR30003.KT) | DMEM//F12; BSA | Y | N |
| bFGF, insulin, | ||||
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| Stem RD (#SC500M-1) | DMEM//F12 with recombinant HSA | Y | Y |
| bFGF, TGFβ1, insulin,transferrrin, selenium, lipids | ||||
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| Ajinomoto Co. | Basal medium, HSA | Y | N |
| bFGF |
Table 3 contains a list of commercially available media that can be used for serum free culture of HESCs and hiPSCs.
XF xeno-free, no animal components in medium.
CD chemically defined medium (excludes any media containing BSA or HSA fraction due to their unknown and variable composition).
aOriginal formulation similar to mTESR1 but with HSA fraction. Replaced by TESR2 with recombinant form of HSA.