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research article

Low-temperature pausing of cultivated mammalian cells

Hunt, L.  
•
Hacker, D. L.  
•
Grosjean, F.  
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2005
Biotechnol Bioeng

There are currently two methods for maintaining cultured mammalian cells, continuous passage at 37 degrees C and freezing in small batches. We investigated a third approach, the "pausing" of cells for days or weeks at temperatures below 37 degrees C in a variety of cultivation vessels. High cell viability and exponential growth were observed after pausing a recombinant Chinese hamster ovary cell line (CHO-Clone 161) in a temperature range of 6-24 degrees C in microcentrifuge tubes for up to 3 weeks. After pausing in T-flasks at 4 degrees C for 9 days, adherent cultures of CHO-DG44 and human embryonic kidney (HEK293 EBNA) cells resumed exponential growth when incubated at 37 degrees C. Adherent cultures of CHO-DG44 cells paused for 2 days at 4 degrees C in T-flasks and suspension cultures of HEK293 EBNA cells paused for 3 days at either 4 degrees C or 24 degrees C in spinner flasks were efficiently transfected by the calcium phosphate-DNA coprecipitation method, yielding reporter protein levels comparable to those from nonpaused cultures. Finally, cultures of a recombinant CHO cell line (CHO-YIgG3) paused for 3 days at 4 degrees C, 12 degrees C, or 24 degrees C in bioreactors achieved the same cell mass and recombinant protein productivity levels as nonpaused cultures. The success of this approach to cell storage with rodent and human cell lines points to a general biological phenomenon which may have a wide range of applications for cultivated mammalian cells.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/bit.20320
Web of Science ID

WOS:000226121100004

PubMed ID

15584025

Author(s)
Hunt, L.  
•
Hacker, D. L.  
•
Grosjean, F.  
•
De Jesus, M.  
•
Uebersax, L.
•
Jordan, M.  
•
Wurm, F. M.  
Date Issued

2005

Published in
Biotechnol Bioeng
Volume

89

Issue

2

Start page

157

End page

63

Subjects

Animals

•

*Bioreactors

•

CHO Cells

•

Cell Culture Techniques/*methods

•

Cell Line

•

Cell Proliferation

•

Cell Survival/*physiology

•

Cricetinae

•

Cricetulus

•

Cryopreservation/*methods

•

Humans

•

Kidney/*physiology

•

Temperature

•

Time Factors

Note

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne, Faculty of Basic Sciences, Institute of Biological and Chemical Process Sciences, CH1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.

Evaluation Studies

Journal Article

Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

United States

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBTC  
Available on Infoscience
July 20, 2007
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/9752
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