Abstract

The objective of this study was to establish a versatile cell line for replication-incompetent virus production and inactivation with formaldehyde to generate a model of cell-based vaccine manufacturing process. To achieve this goal, we took advantage of the easily accessed chick embryonic fibroblasts. Nine-day old chick embryonic fibroblasts were obtained and subjected to be transduced with a set of lentivirus to develop a chick induced pluripotent stem (ciPS) cell line. Morphological features, positive periodic acid-Schiff staining as well as strong immunocytofluorescence of alkaline phosphatase, intestinal (ALPI) and POU class 5 homeobox 1 (POU5F1) proteins suggested that these chick embryonic fibroblasts have been transformed into ciPS cells. Further differentiation and immunocytofluorescence assays confirmed that this ciPS cell line possesses capacities and potentials to form embryoid bodies, differentiate into all three embryonic layers: ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm with evidence of strongly positive and specific molecular markers. Immunoblot analysis next demonstrated that through recombinant DNA technology and the 2nd generation lentiviral transfer system, the goose hemagglutinin gene (H5) gene was packaged into the replication-incompetent virus and highly expressed in a bladder cancer-derived cell line, T24, after transduction. The titer of ciPS-generated replication-incompetent virus is comparable to that from the Phoenix-AMPHO cell line, which is a commercial and high productive retrovirus producer. Our study successfully established a ciPS cell line which is able to produce replication-incompetent virus, providing a new strategy for cell-based vaccine production after virus inactivation.

Highlights

  • The objective of this study was to establish a versatile cell line for replication-incompetent virus production and inactivation with formaldehyde to generate a model of cell-based vaccine manufacturing process

  • Not all fibroblasts were successfully transduced by the Set of Lentivirus (LIN28A, NANOG, SOX2, POU5F1, KLF4 and MYC) in the beginning, only few fibroblasts were found after subculture to passage #12 to #13, due to their differentiation and unable to proliferate anymore (Fig. 2)

  • We found that replication-incompetent virus embracing recombinant goose influenza H5 gene could be produced in a silkie chick embryonic fibroblast-derived chick induced pluripotent stem (ciPS) cell line

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Summary

Introduction

The objective of this study was to establish a versatile cell line for replication-incompetent virus production and inactivation with formaldehyde to generate a model of cell-based vaccine manufacturing process. To achieve this goal, we took advantage of the accessed chick embryonic fibroblasts. Our study successfully established a ciPS cell line which is able to produce replication-incompetent virus, providing a new strategy for cell-based vaccine production after virus inactivation. While iPSC technology is expected to revolutionize regenerative medicine, disease modeling and drug discovery in the near future[16], here we propose that iPSCs may serve as a tool for cell-based vaccine production (inactivated virus) with a recombinant goose influenza H5 gene

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