Although immunodeficiency associated with heterozygosity for a JAK3 mutation has rarely been reported

July 5, 2017

Precise temporal control and consistency between manufacturing runs indicated a reproducible and robust specification of each lineage. The plots are ordered according to CyT49 cell bank: black bar, grey bar, open grey bar. The average and standard deviation of three biological replicates are plotted. Additional data is shown in Figs. S6, S7. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0037004.g003 S12, S13, S14). The grafts contained large areas of MGCD 0103 endocrine clusters surrounded by mouse connective tissue and occasional small, or large, ducts with varying epithelial morphologies. A subset of small and large grafts were examined independently by a board-certified pathologist at approximately 18 or 26 weeks post-implant. The pathologist characterized the grafts as pancreatic tissue comprised of islets and ducts, and noted that approximately half of these grafts were cystic. These cysts were suggested to represent dilated pancreatic ducts. Immunofluores- cence analyses supported the histological and physiological data. Consistent with glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, the grafts exhibited large clusters of insulin+ cells with PDX1+ and NKX61+ nuclei. Cells immunoreactive for other pancreatic hormones, including glucagon, somatostatin, ghrelin, and pancreatic polypeptide were also observed. The grafts also occasionally displayed trypsin+ exocrine cells and cytokeratin 19+/PDX1+ ductal cells, demonstrating the potential to generate all three pancreatic lineages in vivo, as described previously,. 8 Production of Functional Pancreatic Progenitors These cell components were confirmed to be derived from the implanted cells as determined by staining for a human nuclear specific antigen. The histological and immunofluorescent analyses therefore indicated that the grafts were predominantly comprised of endodermal derivatives, principally pancreatic tissues. Discussion We report here an integrated manufacturing process for a hESC-based therapeutic candidate for type 1 diabetes using the CyT49 cell line. High-density, single cell banks of CyT49 were thawed and expanded with efficient population doublings. Expanded cultures were aggregated in suspension, generating uniform clusters of undifferentiated cells, which were then differentiated in suspension en masse. An optimized 4-stage protocol directed the stepwise formation of highly enriched pancreatic populations that functioned robustly in vivo. The process integrates a standardized cell source and scaled differentiation with the ability to cryopreserve the end-stage pancreatic aggregates so that function is retained in vivo. This provides the critical ability to test function and safety of scaled manufactured lots, prior to pre-clinical studies or clinical application. Our approach represents the first demonstration of a practical system for manufacturing a hESC-based treatment for type 1 diabetes, mitigating many of the perceived hurdles to clinical development. In contrast to previous reports of cGMP banking of clinicallyrelevant hESC lines, which by necessity relied on earlier clumppassaging methodologies, our single-cell suspension cGMP MCB/WCB are a starting point for acute scaled expansion for producing large batches of pancreatic progenitors. WCB4B vials could theoretically be thawed on a monthly basis, generating batches of.1010 cells each month, and at that rate would provide starting material for more PubMed ID:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22187349 than 20 years of manufacturing. If exhausted, additional WCBs derived from MCB4 could be Production of