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Transgenic human ES and iPS reporter cell lines for identification and selection of pluripotent stem cells in vitro
Author(s) -
Dmitry A. Ovchinnikov,
Drew M. Titmarsh,
Patrick R.J. Fortuna,
Alejandro Hidalgo,
Samah Alharbi,
Deanne J. Whitworth,
Justin J. CooperWhite,
Ernst J. Wolvetang
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
stem cell research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.654
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1876-7753
pISSN - 1873-5061
DOI - 10.1016/j.scr.2014.05.006
Subject(s) - biology , induced pluripotent stem cell , transgene , in vitro , identification (biology) , stem cell , microbiology and biotechnology , cell culture , selection (genetic algorithm) , computational biology , embryonic stem cell , genetics , gene , botany , artificial intelligence , computer science
Optimization of pluripotent stem cell expansion and differentiation is facilitated by biological tools that permit non-invasive and dynamic monitoring of pluripotency, and the ability to select for an undifferentiated input cell population. Here we report on the generation and characterisation of clonal human embryonic stem (HES3, H9) and human induced pluripotent stem cell lines (UQEW01i-epifibC11) that have been stably modified with an artificial EOS(C3+) promoter driving expression of EGFP and puromycin resistance-conferring proteins. We show that EGFP expression faithfully reports on the pluripotency status of the cells in these lines and that antibiotic selection allows for an efficient elimination of differentiated cells from the cultures. We demonstrate that the extinction of the expression of the pluripotency reporter during differentiation closely correlates with the decrease in expression of conventional pluripotency markers, such as OCT4 (POU5F1), TRA-1-60 and SSEA4 when screening across conditions with various levels of pluripotency-maintaining or differentiation-inducing signals. We further illustrate the utility of these lines for real-time monitoring of pluripotency in embryoid bodies and microfluidic bioreactors.

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