| Literature DB >> 32439307 |
Xiaoyun Wu1, Zhijie Ma2, Daocheng Wu3.
Abstract
The use of animal serum in culture medium brings safety concerns and batch-to-batch variability, and thus may restrict the clinical use of ex vivo expanded mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs). Clinically compliant MSCs should be developed in adherence to serum-free, xeno-free and chemically defined medium (S&XFM-CD). In this study, we develop a S&XFM-CD by replacing all serum components with synthetic alternatives for the derivation of clinical-grade umbilical cord-derived MSCs (UCMSCs). The critical aspects including characterization, safety concerns, potency and exogenous factors contamination risk of UCMSCs in S&XFM-CD are compared with serum-containing medium (SCM). UCMSCs in S&XFM-CD retain fibroblastic-like morphology and immunophenotype of MSCs, and exhibit superior clone efficiency, proliferation capacity, and osteogenic and chondrogenic differentiation potential compared with SCM. Moreover, UCMSCs in S&XFM-CD retain similar immunosuppressive potential, and exhibit superior secretion levels of bFGF, PDGF-BB and IGF-1 compared with SCM. In addition, UCMSCs in S&XFM-CD do not undergo transformation, preserve the normal karyotypes and genomic stability, and are less prone to senescence process after long-term in vitro culture, which conforms to the current guidance of international and national evaluation standard. The S&XFM-CD developed here may serve as a GMP-grade production platform of UCMSCs for future clinical application.Entities:
Keywords: Cellular therapy; Clinical grade; Good manufacturing practice; Mesenchymal stromal cells; Serum free
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32439307 DOI: 10.1016/j.jcyt.2020.03.431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytotherapy ISSN: 1465-3249 Impact factor: 5.414