Surface-engineered substrates for improved human pluripotent stem cell culture under fully defined conditions

The current gold standard for the culture of human pluripotent stem cells requires the use of a feeder layer of cells. Here, we develop a spatially defined culture system based on UV/ozone radiation modification of typical cell culture plastics to define a favorable surface environment for human plu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2011-11, Vol.108 (46), p.18714-18719
Hauptverfasser: Saha, Krishanu, Mei, Ying, Reisterer, Colin M., Pyzocha, Neena Kenton, Yang, Jing, Muffat, Julien, Davies, Martyn C., Alexander, Morgan R., Langer, Robert, Anderson, Daniel G., Jaenisch, Rudolf
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The current gold standard for the culture of human pluripotent stem cells requires the use of a feeder layer of cells. Here, we develop a spatially defined culture system based on UV/ozone radiation modification of typical cell culture plastics to define a favorable surface environment for human pluripotent stem cell culture. Chemical and geometrical optimization of the surfaces enables control of early cell aggregation from fully dissociated cells, as predicted from a numerical model of cell migration, and results in significant increases in cell growth of undifferentiated cells. These chemically defined xeno-free substrates generate more than three times the number of cells than feeder-containing substrates per surface area. Further, reprogramming and typical gene-targeting protocols can be readily performed on these engineered surfaces. These substrates provide an attractive cell culture platform for the production of clinically relevant factor-free reprogrammed cells from patient tissue samples and facilitate the definition of standardized scale-up friendly methods for disease modeling and cell therapeutic applications.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1114854108