| March
24, 2005
Researchers Maintain Stem Cells Without
Contaminated Animal Feeder Layers
By Sue Pondrom
The growth and
maintenance of human embryonic stem cells in the absence of
contaminated animal products has been demonstrated by University
of California, San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine researchers
in the Whittier
Institute*, La Jolla, California.
Published in the April
2005 issue of the journal Stem Cells, the study shows
that laboratory culture media enriched by a human protein called
activin A are capable of maintaining human embryonic stem cells
in a continuous undifferentiated state, ready for research.
Undifferentiation means the stem cells have not begun the developmental
path to become specific human tissue or organs.
“Our findings
provide a new way to generate human stem cell lines without
contamination by animal cells or products,” said the study’s
senior author, Alberto Hayek, M.D., UCSD professor of pediatrics
and director of the Islet Research Laboratory at the Whittier
Institute.
Currently, stem cell
lines derived from human embryos are grown and nourished in
petri dish material called feeder layers that are made with
animal connective tissue, primarily mouse and calf. A recent
study in Nature
Medicine**
by UCSD’s Ajit Varki, M.D. showed that human embryonic
stem cells grown in this animal-derived tissue become contaminated
with a non-human molecule called Neu5Gc. If these stem cells
were to be transplanted into people, they would provoke an immune
system attack eliminating their therapeutic value.
While several laboratories
have attempted to grow stem cells in alternative cultures, problems
have remained. In some cases, human feeder layers were developed
but this added another measure of complexity to the culture
system, Hayek noted. In recent studies in Wisconsin and Massachusetts,
new feeder layers were developed, but they did not entirely
eliminate the use of animal products. In the Hayek study, the
animal-derived feeder layers are completely eliminated. However,
the petri dishes themselves are coated with laminin (an animal-derived
product), and the UCSD team is continuing studies to determine
if contamination occurs from this source.
For a proposed animal-free
medium, the UCSD study takes advantage of a previously unidentified
soluble factor this is secreted from mouse feeder layers to
maintain stem cells’ undifferentiated state and pluripotency,
the ability to become all tissue types in the body. The scientists
knew that a cocktail of various growth factors and chemicals
had previously been shown to modulate cellular growth and differentiation
in human pancreatic cells. Human embryonic stem cells cultured
for several weeks under these conditions showed no change in
cell form and structure. The team then eliminated each factor
and pluripotency was assessed. At first, the results were narrowed
to three molecules, with activin A, a protein that participates
in cellular growth and differentiation, as well as hormone secretion,
finally shown in additional testing to maintain the undifferentiated
state.
The study’s first
author, Gillian M. Beattie, M.S., UCSD Department of Pediatrics
and the Whittier Institute, said that “it will be rather
simple now to develop a specific defined medium that allows
for the maintenance of the human stem cells and enhances research
without the problem of contaminating animal cells and their
products.”
In a summary to their
paper, the researchers noted that “the identification
of activin A as a key factor in mediating these cellular events
will help to unravel the biochemical pathways responsible for
‘stemness’. An increased efficiency in the generation
and culture of human stem cells for potential clinical applications
is timely, given the recent report of 17 newly derived stem
cell lines available for non-federal research. The findings
here may facilitate the derivation of new human embryonic stem
cell lines without the use of animal or human feeder layers.”
The study was supported
by a grant from the Larry L. Hillblom Foundation. Additional
authors were Ana D. Lopez, Andrew Hinton, and Charles C. King,
Whittier Institute, UCSD Department of Pediatrics; and Meri
T. Firpo, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive
Science, UC San Francisco.
The University of California
has licensed this technology to Stem Tech, Inc., which plans
to develop commercially viable culture media free of animal
derived products.
Contact: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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