AI Article Synopsis

  • The contamination of human cell-processed therapeutic products (hCTPs) with tumorigenic cells poses a significant challenge for their manufacturing and quality control, particularly due to the lack of standardized detection methods.
  • Researchers tested NOD/Shi-scid IL2Rγ (NOG) mice for their ability to detect tumorigenic cells (using HeLa cells as a model) and found that NOG mice showed a 30-fold higher sensitivity compared to traditional nude mice.
  • The study demonstrated that using Matrigel in conjunction with NOG mice further enhanced detection sensitivity by 5000 times, making this method a promising approach for rigorously assessing tumorigenic impurities in hCTPs.

Article Abstract

The contamination of human cell-processed therapeutic products (hCTPs) with tumorigenic cells is one of the major concerns in the manufacturing and quality control of hCTPs. However, no quantitative method for detecting the tumorigenic cellular impurities is currently standardized. NOD/Shi-scid IL2Rγ (NOG) mice have shown high xeno-engraftment potential compared with other well-known immunodeficient strains, e.g. nude mice. Hypothesizing that tumorigenicity test using NOG mice could be a sensitive and quantitative method to detect a small amount of tumorigenic cells in hCTPs, we examined tumor formation after subcutaneous transplantation of HeLa cells, as a model of tumorigenic cells, in NOG mice and nude mice. Sixteen weeks after inoculation, the 50% tumor-producing dose (TPD) values of HeLa cells were stable at 1.3 × 10 and 4.0 × 10 cells in NOG and nude mice, respectively, indicating a 30-fold higher sensitivity of NOG mice compared to that of nude mice. Transplanting HeLa cells embedded with Matrigel in NOG mice further decreased the TPD value to 7.9 × 10 cells, leading to a 5000-fold higher sensitivity, compared with that of nude mice. Additionally, when HeLa cells were mixed with 10 or 10 human mesenchymal stem cells as well as Matrigel, the TPD values in NOG mice were comparable to those of HeLa cells alone with Matrigel. These results suggest that the tumorigenicity test using NOG mice with Matrigel is a highly sensitive and quantitative method to detect a trace amount of tumorigenic cellular impurities in human somatic cells, which can be useful in the quality assessment of hCTPs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6581766PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.reth.2014.12.001DOI Listing

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