Abstract

The self-renewal and differentiation capacities of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) make them a promising source of material for cell transplantation therapy, drug development, and studies of cellular differentiation and development. However, the large numbers of cells necessary for many of these applications require extensive expansion of hPSC cultures, a process that has been associated with genetic and epigenetic alterations. We have performed a combinatorial study on both hESCs and hiPSCs to compare the effects of enzymatic vs. mechanical passaging, and feeder-free vs. mouse embryonic fibroblast feeder substrate, on the genetic and epigenetic stability and the phenotypic characteristics of hPSCs. In extensive experiments involving over 100 continuous passages, we observed that both enzymatic passaging and feeder-free culture were associated with genetic instability, higher rates of cell proliferation, and persistence of OCT4/POU5F1-positive cells in teratomas, with enzymatic passaging having the stronger effect. In all combinations of culture conditions except for mechanical passaging on feeder layers, we noted recurrent deletions in the genomic region containing the tumor suppressor gene TP53, which was associated with decreased mRNA expression of TP53, as well as alterations in the expression of several downstream genes consistent with a decrease in the activity of the TP53 pathway. Among the hESC cultures, we also observed culture-associated variations in global gene expression and DNA methylation. The effects of enzymatic passaging and feeder-free conditions were also observed in hiPSC cultures. Our results highlight the need for careful assessment of the effects of culture conditions on cells intended for clinical therapies.

Highlights

  • Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs, which include human embryonic stem cells and human induced pluripotent stem cells) hold great promise for clinical applications

  • Given the high priority that has been placed on the development of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs)-based therapies for regenerative medicine, it is critical that we understand and appreciate the impact that the procedures used to manipulate the cells, including derivation, culture, and differentiation, can have on their genetic and epigenetic stability

  • We report the results of a highly replicated study identifying the effects of different substrates and passaging methods over extensive time in culture on genetic and epigenetic stability, and phenotypic characteristics of hPSCs

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Summary

Introduction

Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs, which include human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs)) hold great promise for clinical applications. Their tremendous self-renewal and differentiation capacities make them potential sources of large quantities of differentiated cells for drug screening, toxicology studies, biomolecule production, and cell therapy. Much attention has been paid to the recurrent aberrations that have been found in multiple hPSC lines, including subchromosomal duplications on chromosomes 12 and 20, which are of particular interested because the chromosome 12 duplications frequently contain the pluripotency-associated NANOG gene and/or NANOGP1 (one of its pseudogenes), and the chromosome 20 duplication has been found to impart increased cell survival due to increased expression of Bcl-xL [7,8]. Many sporadic genetic aberrations have been observed in only hPSC line, and the phenotypes of such aberrations have not been characterized

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