| Literature DB >> 32948237 |
Loriana Vitillo1, Catherine Durance2, Zoe Hewitt3, Harry Moore3, Austin Smith2,4, Ludovic Vallier2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A major challenge for the clinical use of human pluripotent stem cells is the development of safe, robust and controlled differentiation protocols. Adaptation of research protocols using reagents designated as research-only to those which are suitable for clinical use, often referred to as good manufacturing practice (GMP) reagents, is a crucial and laborious step in the translational pipeline. However, published protocols to assist this process remain very limited.Entities:
Keywords: Cell therapy; GMP; Neural progenitors; Pluripotent stem cells; hESCs
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32948237 PMCID: PMC7501686 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-020-01915-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Development of an efficient GMP-compatible protocol for lt-NES. a Step-by-step diagram of GMP-compatible differentiation protocol of hESCs into lt-NES. Scale bars (a, c, d) 100 μm, (b) 50 μm and (e) 20 μm. b Immunofluorescence for lt-NES markers Nestin and Dach1 in research-grade line H9 after derivation with GMP-compatible protocol. Scale bars 200 μm
Fig. 2Neural differentiation potential of clinical grade hESC lines. a Representative phase contrast images of H9 and clinical-grade hESCs differentiated under GMP-compliant protocol into neural rosettes. Enlarged neural rosettes are visible in the right-hand side panels. Scale bars 200 μm. b Formula for the calculation of neural induction efficiency based on neural rosette in hESC lines. c Summary of screening of research and clinical-grade hESCs for neural induction capacity under GMP-compatible protocol
Fig. 3Establishment and characterisation of GMP-compatible lt-NES. a Representative phase contrast showing morphology of lt-NES derived from clinical grade MasterShef 7 (NES7) and 8 (NES8). Scale bars 20 μm. NES7 and NES8 cells were immunostained for the lt-NES markers Nestin, SOX2, Dach1, PLZF and the polarity marker ZO-1. Scale bars 50 μm. b Gene expression levels of lt-NES markers in NES7 and NES8 compared to research-grade AF22 lt-NES line and assessed by Q-PCR (n = 3). c Recovery after thaw of NES cells at 24 h. Graph shown as mean plus SEM (n = 3). d Representative growth curve of NES7, NES8 and control AF22 cultured under GMP-compatible conditions on L521. e Normal karyology of established NES7 at passage 15 cultured in GMP-compatible system
Fig. 4Spontaneous and directed GMP-compatible differentiation of lt-NES. a Spontaneous differentiation of NES lines into neurons under GMP-compatible conditions. Spontaneous neurogenic potential shown by phase contrast (scale bars 100 μm) and immunostaining for neuronal marker BIII Tubulin (NES7; scale bar 400 μm). Typical hindbrain bias of lt-NES shown by expression of GABAergic markers GABA (scale bars 400 μm). b Directed differentiation of NES lines into midbrain dopaminergic neurons under GMP-compatible conditions. Immunostaining images showing positivity for dopaminergic markers tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and Nurr1. Scale bars 400 μm (200 μm for AF22 Nurr1). c Directed differentiation of NES lines into motoneurons under GMP-compatible conditions showing motor neuron marker HB9 expression by immunofluorescence. Scale bars 100 μm