The diagnostic test enables accurate, rapid assessment of the quality of stem cell lines
LA JOLLA, CA – March 6, 2011 – "Pluripotent" stem cells—which have the potential to
mature into almost any cell in the body—are being widely studied for
their role in treating a vast array of human diseases and for generating
cells and tissues for transplantation. Now, a team of Scripps Research
Institute scientists has created a quality control diagnostic test that
will make it much easier for researchers to determine whether their cell
lines are normal pluripotent cells.
The study was published in an online version of Nature Methods on March 6, 2011.
"Many
scientists are unhappy with the current gold standard for testing for
pluripotency, called the teratoma assay," said Scripps Research
molecular biologist Jeanne Loring, principal investigator of the study.
"The teratoma assay requires animal testing and a time span of six to
eight weeks before scientists can prove that they have a pluripotent
stem cell line. In addition, this method is technically challenging and
difficult to standardize."
The new test, called "PluriTest,"
meets the need for a cost-effective, accurate, animal-free alternative
to the teratoma assay for assessing pluripotency. Using microarray
technology, which enables the simultaneous analysis of thousands of
different DNA sequences, the Scripps Research team created a large
database of information about all the genes that are active in hundreds
of normal human embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cells and a
variety of non-pluripotent cell lines. For PluriTest, this database was
used to create a detailed molecular model of a normal pluripotent stem
cell line.
"Unlike diagnostic tests that use small sets of
biomarkers to examine cells, the molecular model approach uses all of
the thousands of pieces of information in a microarray," Loring
said. "This results in a diagnostic test with remarkable sensitivity and
specificity." Scientists upload raw data straight from a single
microarray analysis to the PluriTest website and learn within 10 minutes
whether their cell line is pluripotent.
An additional feature of
the PluriTest diagnostic test is that it can show whether a cell that
is pluripotent is different in some way from the normal model
pluripotent cell line. For example, a "novelty score" generated by the
software may indicate that the pluripotent cells have genomic
aberrations such as extra copies of genes or chromosomes. This feature
would alert the researcher to do additional analysis on the cells to
determine what is causing the abnormality.
A first author of the
study, Franz-Josef Mueller, said, "Scientists are making new induced
pluripotent stem cell lines at a rapid pace to understand human disease,
test new drugs, and develop regenerative therapies. Thousands of
induced pluripotent stem cell lines have already been generated and soon
there will be many more thousands. PluriTest is designed to enable the
growth of this technology."
First authors of the paper, "A
bioinformatic assay for pluripotency in human cells," are Mueller of
Zentrum fur Integrative Psychiatrie (Kiel, Germany) and Bernhard M.
Schuldt of Rheinisch-Westfalische Technische Hoschschule Aachen (Aachen,
Germany). In addition to Loring, Mueller, and Schuldt, authors of the
study included Roy Williams of the Sanford-Burnham Medical Research
Institute, Dylan Mason (an independent consultant), Gulsah Altun of
Scripps Research, Eirini P. Papapetrou of Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center, Sandra Danner of Fraunhofer Research Institution for
Marine Biotechnology (Lubeck, Germany), Johanna E. Goldmann of Scripps
Research and Freie Universitat (Berlin, Germany), Arne Herbst and Josef
B. Aldenhoff of Zentrum fur Integrative Psychiatrie, Nils O. Schmidt of
University of University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, and Louise C.
Laurent of Scripps Research and the University of California, San
Diego.
The study was supported by the California Institute for
Regenerative Medicine, the National Institutes of Health, the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation, the Esther O'Keeffe Foundation, New York State
Stem Cell Science, Bayer Technology Services GmbH, the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft, an Else-Kröner Fresenius Stiftung fellowship.
About The Scripps Research Institute
The
Scripps Research Institute is one of the world's largest independent,
non-profit biomedical research organizations. Headquartered in La Jolla,
California, Scripps Research is internationally recognized for its
discoveries in immunology, molecular and cellular biology, chemistry,
neuroscience, and synthetic vaccine development, as well as autoimmune,
cardiovascular, and infectious disease. The institute also includes a
campus in Jupiter, Florida, where scientists focus on basic biomedical
science, drug discovery, and technology development. Scripps Research
currently employs approximately 3,000 scientists, staff, postdoctoral
fellows, and graduate students on its two campuses. The institute's
graduate program, which awards Ph.D. degrees in biology and chemistry,
is ranked among the top ten such programs in the nation. For more
information, see www.scripps.edu.
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