Culture expansion of adipose derived stromal cells. A closed automated Quantum Cell Expansion System compared with manual flask-based culture

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Culture expansion of adipose derived stromal cells. A closed automated Quantum Cell Expansion System compared with manual flask-based culture. / Haack-Sørensen, Mandana; Follin, Bjarke; Juhl, Morten; Brorsen, Sonja K.; Søndergaard, Rebekka; Kastrup, Jens; Ekblond, Annette.

In: Journal of Translational Medicine, Vol. 14, No. 1, 319, 2016.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Haack-Sørensen, M, Follin, B, Juhl, M, Brorsen, SK, Søndergaard, R, Kastrup, J & Ekblond, A 2016, 'Culture expansion of adipose derived stromal cells. A closed automated Quantum Cell Expansion System compared with manual flask-based culture', Journal of Translational Medicine, vol. 14, no. 1, 319. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-016-1080-9

APA

Haack-Sørensen, M., Follin, B., Juhl, M., Brorsen, S. K., Søndergaard, R., Kastrup, J., & Ekblond, A. (2016). Culture expansion of adipose derived stromal cells. A closed automated Quantum Cell Expansion System compared with manual flask-based culture. Journal of Translational Medicine, 14(1), [319]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-016-1080-9

Vancouver

Haack-Sørensen M, Follin B, Juhl M, Brorsen SK, Søndergaard R, Kastrup J et al. Culture expansion of adipose derived stromal cells. A closed automated Quantum Cell Expansion System compared with manual flask-based culture. Journal of Translational Medicine. 2016;14(1). 319. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-016-1080-9

Author

Haack-Sørensen, Mandana ; Follin, Bjarke ; Juhl, Morten ; Brorsen, Sonja K. ; Søndergaard, Rebekka ; Kastrup, Jens ; Ekblond, Annette. / Culture expansion of adipose derived stromal cells. A closed automated Quantum Cell Expansion System compared with manual flask-based culture. In: Journal of Translational Medicine. 2016 ; Vol. 14, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{f553b90c3c4345f4a1fd0ab00fcad5ff,
title = "Culture expansion of adipose derived stromal cells. A closed automated Quantum Cell Expansion System compared with manual flask-based culture",
abstract = "Background: Adipose derived stromal cells (ASCs) are a rich and convenient source of cells for clinical regenerative therapeutic approaches. However, applications of ASCs often require cell expansion to reach the needed dose. In this study, cultivation of ASCs from stromal vascular fraction (SVF) over two passages in the automated and functionally closed Quantum Cell Expansion System (Quantum system) is compared with traditional manual cultivation. Methods: Stromal vascular fraction was isolated from abdominal fat, suspended in α-MEM supplemented with 10% Fetal Bovine Serum and seeded into either T75 flasks or a Quantum system that had been coated with cryoprecipitate. The cultivation of ASCs from SVF was performed in 3 ways: flask to flask; flask to Quantum system; and Quantum system to Quantum system. In all cases, quality controls were conducted for sterility, mycoplasmas, and endotoxins, in addition to the assessment of cell counts, viability, immunophenotype, and differentiation potential. Results: The viability of ASCs passage 0 (P0) and P1 was above 96%, regardless of cultivation in flasks or Quantum system. Expression of surface markers and differentiation potential was consistent with ISCT/IFATS standards for the ASC phenotype. Sterility, mycoplasma, and endotoxin tests were consistently negative. An average of 8.0 × 107 SVF cells loaded into a Quantum system yielded 8.96 × 107 ASCs P0, while 4.5 × 106 SVF cells seeded per T75 flask yielded an average of 2.37 × 106 ASCs-less than the number of SVF cells seeded. ASCs P1 expanded in the Quantum system demonstrated a population doubling (PD) around 2.2 regardless of whether P0 was previously cultured in flasks or Quantum, while ASCs P1 in flasks only reached a PD of 1.0. Conclusion: Manufacturing of ASCs in a Quantum system enhances ASC expansion rate and yield significantly relative to manual processing in T-flasks, while maintaining the purity and quality essential to safe and robust cell production. Notably, the use of the Quantum system entails significantly reduced working hours and thereby costs.",
keywords = "Adipose derived stromal cells, Bioreactor, Cell culture, Cell expansion, Clinical application, Coating, Cryoprecipitate, Mesenchymal stem cell, Storage",
author = "Mandana Haack-S{\o}rensen and Bjarke Follin and Morten Juhl and Brorsen, {Sonja K.} and Rebekka S{\o}ndergaard and Jens Kastrup and Annette Ekblond",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1186/s12967-016-1080-9",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "Journal of Translational Medicine",
issn = "1479-5876",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Culture expansion of adipose derived stromal cells. A closed automated Quantum Cell Expansion System compared with manual flask-based culture

AU - Haack-Sørensen, Mandana

AU - Follin, Bjarke

AU - Juhl, Morten

AU - Brorsen, Sonja K.

AU - Søndergaard, Rebekka

AU - Kastrup, Jens

AU - Ekblond, Annette

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Background: Adipose derived stromal cells (ASCs) are a rich and convenient source of cells for clinical regenerative therapeutic approaches. However, applications of ASCs often require cell expansion to reach the needed dose. In this study, cultivation of ASCs from stromal vascular fraction (SVF) over two passages in the automated and functionally closed Quantum Cell Expansion System (Quantum system) is compared with traditional manual cultivation. Methods: Stromal vascular fraction was isolated from abdominal fat, suspended in α-MEM supplemented with 10% Fetal Bovine Serum and seeded into either T75 flasks or a Quantum system that had been coated with cryoprecipitate. The cultivation of ASCs from SVF was performed in 3 ways: flask to flask; flask to Quantum system; and Quantum system to Quantum system. In all cases, quality controls were conducted for sterility, mycoplasmas, and endotoxins, in addition to the assessment of cell counts, viability, immunophenotype, and differentiation potential. Results: The viability of ASCs passage 0 (P0) and P1 was above 96%, regardless of cultivation in flasks or Quantum system. Expression of surface markers and differentiation potential was consistent with ISCT/IFATS standards for the ASC phenotype. Sterility, mycoplasma, and endotoxin tests were consistently negative. An average of 8.0 × 107 SVF cells loaded into a Quantum system yielded 8.96 × 107 ASCs P0, while 4.5 × 106 SVF cells seeded per T75 flask yielded an average of 2.37 × 106 ASCs-less than the number of SVF cells seeded. ASCs P1 expanded in the Quantum system demonstrated a population doubling (PD) around 2.2 regardless of whether P0 was previously cultured in flasks or Quantum, while ASCs P1 in flasks only reached a PD of 1.0. Conclusion: Manufacturing of ASCs in a Quantum system enhances ASC expansion rate and yield significantly relative to manual processing in T-flasks, while maintaining the purity and quality essential to safe and robust cell production. Notably, the use of the Quantum system entails significantly reduced working hours and thereby costs.

AB - Background: Adipose derived stromal cells (ASCs) are a rich and convenient source of cells for clinical regenerative therapeutic approaches. However, applications of ASCs often require cell expansion to reach the needed dose. In this study, cultivation of ASCs from stromal vascular fraction (SVF) over two passages in the automated and functionally closed Quantum Cell Expansion System (Quantum system) is compared with traditional manual cultivation. Methods: Stromal vascular fraction was isolated from abdominal fat, suspended in α-MEM supplemented with 10% Fetal Bovine Serum and seeded into either T75 flasks or a Quantum system that had been coated with cryoprecipitate. The cultivation of ASCs from SVF was performed in 3 ways: flask to flask; flask to Quantum system; and Quantum system to Quantum system. In all cases, quality controls were conducted for sterility, mycoplasmas, and endotoxins, in addition to the assessment of cell counts, viability, immunophenotype, and differentiation potential. Results: The viability of ASCs passage 0 (P0) and P1 was above 96%, regardless of cultivation in flasks or Quantum system. Expression of surface markers and differentiation potential was consistent with ISCT/IFATS standards for the ASC phenotype. Sterility, mycoplasma, and endotoxin tests were consistently negative. An average of 8.0 × 107 SVF cells loaded into a Quantum system yielded 8.96 × 107 ASCs P0, while 4.5 × 106 SVF cells seeded per T75 flask yielded an average of 2.37 × 106 ASCs-less than the number of SVF cells seeded. ASCs P1 expanded in the Quantum system demonstrated a population doubling (PD) around 2.2 regardless of whether P0 was previously cultured in flasks or Quantum, while ASCs P1 in flasks only reached a PD of 1.0. Conclusion: Manufacturing of ASCs in a Quantum system enhances ASC expansion rate and yield significantly relative to manual processing in T-flasks, while maintaining the purity and quality essential to safe and robust cell production. Notably, the use of the Quantum system entails significantly reduced working hours and thereby costs.

KW - Adipose derived stromal cells

KW - Bioreactor

KW - Cell culture

KW - Cell expansion

KW - Clinical application

KW - Coating

KW - Cryoprecipitate

KW - Mesenchymal stem cell

KW - Storage

U2 - 10.1186/s12967-016-1080-9

DO - 10.1186/s12967-016-1080-9

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27852267

AN - SCOPUS:84997236687

VL - 14

JO - Journal of Translational Medicine

JF - Journal of Translational Medicine

SN - 1479-5876

IS - 1

M1 - 319

ER -

ID: 179046014