Engineering an Autonucleolytic Mammalian Suspension Host Cell Line to Reduce DNA Impurity Levels in Serum-Free Lentiviral Process Streams.
Geoffrey HoweMatthew WasmuthPamela EmanuelleGiulia MassaroAhad A RahimSadfer AliMilena RiveraJohn WardEli Keshavarz-MooreChris MasonDarren N NesbethPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2024)
We engineered HEK293T cells with a transgene encoding tetracycline-inducible expression of a Staphylococcus aureus nuclease incorporating a translocation signal. We adapted the unmodified and nuclease-engineered cell lines to grow in suspension in serum-free media, generating the HEK293TS and NuPro-2S cell lines, respectively. Transient transfection yielded 1.19 × 10 6 lentiviral transducing units per milliliter (TU/mL) from NuPro-2S cells and 1.45 × 10 6 TU/mL from HEK293TS cells. DNA ladder disappearance revealed medium-resident nuclease activity arising from NuPro-2S cells in a tetracycline-inducible manner. DNA impurity levels in lentiviral material arising from NuPro-2S and HEK293TS cells were undetectable by SYBR Safe agarose gel staining. Direct measurement by PicoGreen reagent revealed DNA to be present at 636 ng/mL in lentiviral material from HEK293TS cells, an impurity level reduced by 89% to 70 ng/mL in lentiviral material from NuPro-2S cells. This reduction was comparable to the 23 ng/mL achieved by treating HEK293TS-derived lentiviral material with 50 units/mL Benzonase.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- staphylococcus aureus
- signaling pathway
- circulating tumor
- cell death
- cell free
- escherichia coli
- cystic fibrosis
- poor prognosis
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- gene therapy
- dna binding
- quality improvement
- pi k akt
- transcription factor
- patient safety
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- hyaluronic acid
- wound healing