Advances in stem cell biology have afforded promising results for the generation of various cell types for therapies against devastating diseases. However, a prerequisite for realizing the therapeutic potential of stem cells is the development of bioprocesses for the production of stem cell progeny in quantities that satisfy clinical demands. Recent reports on the expansion and directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) in scalable stirred-suspension bioreactors (SSBs) demonstrated that large-scale production of therapeutically useful hESC progeny is feasible with current state-of-the-art culture technologies. Stem cells have been cultured in SSBs as aggregates, in microcarrier suspension and after encapsulation. The various modes in which SSBs can be employed for the cultivation of hESCs and human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) are described. To that end, this is the first account of hiPSC cultivation in a microcarrier stirred-suspension system. Given that cultured stem cells and their differentiated progeny are the actual products used in tissue engineering and cell therapies, the impact of bioreactor's operating conditions on stem cell self-renewal and commitment should be considered. The effects of variables specific to SSB operation on stem cell physiology are discussed. Finally, major challenges are presented which remain to be addressed before the mainstream use of SSBs for the large-scale culture of hESCs and hiPSCs.
FGF Receptor-1 (FGFR1), a membrane-targeted protein, is also involved in independent direct nuclear signaling. We show that nuclear accumulation of FGFR1 is a common response to retinoic acid (RA) in pluripotent embryonic stem cells (ESC) and neural progenitors and is both necessary and sufficient for neuronal-like differentiation and accompanying neuritic outgrowth. Dominant negative nuclear FGFR1, which lacks the tyrosine kinase domain, prevents RA-induced differentiation while full-length nuclear FGFR1 elicits differentiation in the absence of RA. Immunoprecipitation and GST assays demonstrate that FGFR1 interacts with RXR, RAR and their Nur77 and Nurr1 partners. Conditions that promote these interactions decrease the mobility of nuclear FGFR1 and RXR in live cells. RXR and FGFR1 co-associate with 5'-Fluorouridine-labeled transcription sites and with RA Responsive Elements (RARE). RA activation of neuronal (tyrosine hydroxylase) and neurogenic (fgf-2 and fgfr1) genes is accompanied by increased FGFR1, Nur, and histone H3.3 binding to their regulatory sequences. Reporter-gene assays show synergistic activations of RARE, NBRE, and NurRE by FGFR1, RAR/RXR, and Nurs. As shown for mESC differentiation, FGFR1 mediates gene activation by RA and augments transcription in the absence of RA. Cooperation of FGFR1 with RXR/RAR and Nurs at targeted genomic sequences offers a new mechanism in developmental gene regulation.
Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) with their unlimited capacity for self-renewal and ability to differentiate along multiple cell lineages are a superb starting material for biotechnology applications and cellular therapies. However, realization of the potential of ESCs requires the development of scalable systems for their production in large quantities and in a regulated manner. Here, we describe a methodology for the expansion of mouse ESCs (mESCs) as pluripotent aggregates in a stirred suspension bioreactor and in medium without serum. Initially, the culture of feeder cell-independent mESCs in dishes was adapted to serum-free conditions. Also, we explored whether spinner flasks equipped with a triangle-shaped impeller and baffles support the culture of mESC aggregates. Serum-free culture in these vessels resulted in an almost 20-fold increase in the live mESC concentration over 4 days without significant loss of cell viability. Even after consecutive passages, mESCs retained high expression of pluripotency markers Oct3/4, Rex1 and SSEA-1. More importantly, when differentiation was induced these cells adopted fates of all three germ layers namely neuroectoderm, cardiac mesoderm and definitive endoderm. These findings demonstrate that stem cells can be propagated under serum-free conditions in a scalable stirred-suspension culture without loss of their pluripotency.
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