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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.

  • Details
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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

Editorial or 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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