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Human Cells Grown With or Without Substitutes for Fetal Bovine Serum

Safety concerns over cell-derived pharmaceutical products being manufactured in supplements of fetal bovine serum (FBS) have ignited pleas to replace FBS. Herein, four newly marketed alternatives to FBS were compared: a xeno-free product called Cell-Ess®, a human platelet lysate marketed as GroPro®,...

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Autores principales: Piletz, John E., Drivon, Jennifer, Eisenga, John, Buck, Will, Yen, Sabrina, McLin, Megan, Meruvia, William, Amaral, Carolina, Brue, Kellie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6172986/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32634183
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2155179018755140
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author Piletz, John E.
Drivon, Jennifer
Eisenga, John
Buck, Will
Yen, Sabrina
McLin, Megan
Meruvia, William
Amaral, Carolina
Brue, Kellie
author_facet Piletz, John E.
Drivon, Jennifer
Eisenga, John
Buck, Will
Yen, Sabrina
McLin, Megan
Meruvia, William
Amaral, Carolina
Brue, Kellie
author_sort Piletz, John E.
collection PubMed
description Safety concerns over cell-derived pharmaceutical products being manufactured in supplements of fetal bovine serum (FBS) have ignited pleas to replace FBS. Herein, four newly marketed alternatives to FBS were compared: a xeno-free product called Cell-Ess®, a human platelet lysate marketed as GroPro®, and two mixtures of adult bovine serum varying in their proportions of neonatal growth factors, called Liporo® and FetalGro®. An endothelial cell line (C2BBe1) and a neuronal cell line (SHSY5Y) near confluency in media with 10% FBS were selectively scraped and taken through a 25-day step-wise algorithm to replace FBS, and another human endothelial cell line (HRA-19) was studied to replicate C2BBe1. Cells were stained, counted, and compared for viability, migration, and spheroids. The C2BBe1 and HRA-19 cell lines failed to proliferate in 10% Cell-Ess® but grew in 10% GroPro® or 10% FetalGro® reasonably well compared to reference 10% FBS. With SH-SY5Y, only FetalGro® approached FBS's efficacy. These were all inferior to 11 different branded lots of FBS (positive controls), but five days into switching just amongst the FBS brands, 4 of 11 supported less proliferation than reference FBS in endothelial HRA-19 (p < 0.004). Moreover, neurospheres were enriched in two branded lots of FBS and FetalGro® (each p < 0.004), neurospheres being an unwanted phenotype for any neuronal cell application. Because platelet-derived GroPro® stood out amongst the non-FBS growth supplements to allow proliferation without inducing spheroids, it seems the best (mindful that the cells still grew slower in it compared to FBS). While no perfect replacement was found amongst the alternatives to FBS, the algorithm for switching should be useful in future testing of new alternatives to FBS as the need arises to switch from FBS and expand pharmaceutical products with safety for human use.
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spelling pubmed-61729862018-10-09 Human Cells Grown With or Without Substitutes for Fetal Bovine Serum Piletz, John E. Drivon, Jennifer Eisenga, John Buck, Will Yen, Sabrina McLin, Megan Meruvia, William Amaral, Carolina Brue, Kellie Cell Med Original Article Safety concerns over cell-derived pharmaceutical products being manufactured in supplements of fetal bovine serum (FBS) have ignited pleas to replace FBS. Herein, four newly marketed alternatives to FBS were compared: a xeno-free product called Cell-Ess®, a human platelet lysate marketed as GroPro®, and two mixtures of adult bovine serum varying in their proportions of neonatal growth factors, called Liporo® and FetalGro®. An endothelial cell line (C2BBe1) and a neuronal cell line (SHSY5Y) near confluency in media with 10% FBS were selectively scraped and taken through a 25-day step-wise algorithm to replace FBS, and another human endothelial cell line (HRA-19) was studied to replicate C2BBe1. Cells were stained, counted, and compared for viability, migration, and spheroids. The C2BBe1 and HRA-19 cell lines failed to proliferate in 10% Cell-Ess® but grew in 10% GroPro® or 10% FetalGro® reasonably well compared to reference 10% FBS. With SH-SY5Y, only FetalGro® approached FBS's efficacy. These were all inferior to 11 different branded lots of FBS (positive controls), but five days into switching just amongst the FBS brands, 4 of 11 supported less proliferation than reference FBS in endothelial HRA-19 (p < 0.004). Moreover, neurospheres were enriched in two branded lots of FBS and FetalGro® (each p < 0.004), neurospheres being an unwanted phenotype for any neuronal cell application. Because platelet-derived GroPro® stood out amongst the non-FBS growth supplements to allow proliferation without inducing spheroids, it seems the best (mindful that the cells still grew slower in it compared to FBS). While no perfect replacement was found amongst the alternatives to FBS, the algorithm for switching should be useful in future testing of new alternatives to FBS as the need arises to switch from FBS and expand pharmaceutical products with safety for human use. SAGE Publications 2018-06-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6172986/ /pubmed/32634183 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2155179018755140 Text en © The Author(s) 2018 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Article
Piletz, John E.
Drivon, Jennifer
Eisenga, John
Buck, Will
Yen, Sabrina
McLin, Megan
Meruvia, William
Amaral, Carolina
Brue, Kellie
Human Cells Grown With or Without Substitutes for Fetal Bovine Serum
title Human Cells Grown With or Without Substitutes for Fetal Bovine Serum
title_full Human Cells Grown With or Without Substitutes for Fetal Bovine Serum
title_fullStr Human Cells Grown With or Without Substitutes for Fetal Bovine Serum
title_full_unstemmed Human Cells Grown With or Without Substitutes for Fetal Bovine Serum
title_short Human Cells Grown With or Without Substitutes for Fetal Bovine Serum
title_sort human cells grown with or without substitutes for fetal bovine serum
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6172986/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32634183
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2155179018755140
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