| Literature DB >> 28302587 |
Smriti Shridhar1, Gerald Klanert2, Norbert Auer1, Inmaculada Hernandez-Lopez2, Maciej M Kańduła1, Matthias Hackl1, Johannes Grillari1, Nancy Stralis-Pavese1, David P Kreil3, Nicole Borth4.
Abstract
Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells are the preferred cell line for production of biopharmaceuticals. These cells are capable to grow without serum supplementation, but drastic changes in their phenotype occur during adaptation to protein-free growth, which typically include the change to a suspension phenotype with reduced growth rate. A possible approach to understand this transformation, with the intention to counteract the reduction in growth by targeted supplementation of protein-free media, is gene expression profiling. The increasing availability of genome-scale data for CHO now facilitates quests for a better understanding of metabolic pathways and gene networks. So far, systematic large-scale expression profiling in CHO cells by microarray was limited due to lack of publicly available array designs and limitations of alternative approaches. Based on the recent release of CHO and Chinese Hamster genome sequences, including an annotated RefSeq genome, we have constructed a publicly available microarray design for effective genome-scale expression profiling. The design employed microarray probes optimized for uniformity, sensitivity, and specificity, with probe properties computed using the latest thermodynamic models. We validated the platform in an analysis of gene expression changes in response to serum-free adaptation. The observed effects on the lipid metabolism as well as on nucleotide synthesis were used to successfully select media supplements that were able to increase growth rate.Entities:
Keywords: CHO; Chinese Hamster Ovary; Gene ontology; KEGG; Microarray; Probe design; Serum deprivation; Specificity; Transcriptome
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28302587 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2017.03.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biotechnol ISSN: 0168-1656 Impact factor: 3.307