scholarly journals Large-scalein-vitroproduction of red blood cells from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Heshusius ◽  
Esther Heideveld ◽  
Patrick Burger ◽  
Marijke Thiel-Valkhof ◽  
Erica Sellink ◽  
...  

AbstractTransfusion of donor-derived red blood cells is the most common form of cellular therapy. Donor availability and the potential risk of alloimmunization and other transfusion-related complications may, however, limit the availability of transfusion units especially for chronically transfused patients.In-vitrocultured, customizable red blood cells would negate these concerns and introduce precision medicine. Large-scale, cost effective production depends on optimization of culture conditions. We developed a defined medium and adapted our protocols to GMP culture requirements, which reproducibly provided pure erythroid cultures from peripheral blood mononuclear cells without prior CD34+isolation, and a 3×107-fold increase in erythroblasts in 25 days. Expanded erythroblast cultures could be differentiated to CD71dimCD235a+CD44+CD117−DRAQ5−red blood cells in 12 days. More than 90% of the cells enucleated and expressed adult hemoglobin as well as the correct blood group antigens. Deformability and oxygen binding capacity of cultured red blood cells was comparable toin-vivoreticulocytes. Daily RNA sampling during differentiation followed by RNA-seq provided a high-resolution map/resource of changes occurring during terminal erythropoiesis. The culture process was compatible with upscaling using a G-Rex bioreactor with a capacity of 1L per reactor, allowing transition towards clinical studies and small-scale applications.

Blood ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 1050-1057 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Meytes ◽  
JA Ma Ortega ◽  
NA Shore ◽  
PP Dukes

Abstract The regulation of erythroid burst-colony formation was studied in cultures of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Numbers of erythropoietin-stimulated colonies obtainable from the cells in response to various treatments were compared. One-day preincubation of the cells with phytohemagglutinin (PHA) doubled the yield of colonies. Irradiation of the cells with 3000 rad eliminated their ability to form erythroid bursts, but did not impair the ability of PHA-treated cells to enhance burst formation when added to a fresh batch of cells. This was due to a humoral factor, since media conditioned by PHA-treated washed cells were as effective as the cells themselves. When cells were separated into subpopulations by an adherence procedure and according to their ability to form rosettes with sheep red blood cells, it was found that the PHA-dependent burst-promoting activity released into the medium originated in a nonadherent, nonrosetting (T-cell depleted) cell population.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shouping Zhang ◽  
Emmanuel N Olivier ◽  
Zi Yan ◽  
Sandra Suzuka ◽  
Karl Roberts ◽  
...  

AbstractMany methods have been developed to produce red blood cellsin vitrobut translational applications have been hampered by the high cost of production. We have developed R6, a chemically-defined, albumin-free, low-transferrin culture medium, and MNC-RED, a protocol to differentiate peripheral blood mononuclear cells into enucleated erythroid cells that does not require any albumin or any animal components. Erythropoiesis requires large amounts of iron for hemoglobin synthesis. In all existing protocols, these large iron needs are met by increasing the concentration of holo-transferrin. This is necessary because transferrin recycling does not take place in existing erythroid culture conditions. In the R6 medium, iron is provided to the differentiating erythroblasts by small amounts of recombinant transferrin supplemented with FeIII-EDTA, an iron chelator that allows transferrin recycling to take place in cell culture. As a result of the absence of albumin and the use of low amounts of transferrin, the production of cultured red blood cells using the MNC-RED protocol is much less expensive than with existing protocols. The MNC-RED protocol should therefore help make the many translational applications of cultured RBCs economically more feasible.HighlightsWe have developed R6, a chemically-defined, albumin-free low-transferrin culture medium, and MNC-RED, a protocol to differentiate peripheral blood mononuclear cells into enucleated erythroid ER6 is suitable for red blood cell culture despite the low transferrin amounts because of the presence of FeIII-EDTA, an iron chelator that allows transferrin recycling to take place in cell culture.The MNC-RED protocol should help make the many translational applications of cultured RBCs more economically feasible.


Blood ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 1050-1057
Author(s):  
D Meytes ◽  
JA Ma Ortega ◽  
NA Shore ◽  
PP Dukes

The regulation of erythroid burst-colony formation was studied in cultures of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Numbers of erythropoietin-stimulated colonies obtainable from the cells in response to various treatments were compared. One-day preincubation of the cells with phytohemagglutinin (PHA) doubled the yield of colonies. Irradiation of the cells with 3000 rad eliminated their ability to form erythroid bursts, but did not impair the ability of PHA-treated cells to enhance burst formation when added to a fresh batch of cells. This was due to a humoral factor, since media conditioned by PHA-treated washed cells were as effective as the cells themselves. When cells were separated into subpopulations by an adherence procedure and according to their ability to form rosettes with sheep red blood cells, it was found that the PHA-dependent burst-promoting activity released into the medium originated in a nonadherent, nonrosetting (T-cell depleted) cell population.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2319-2319
Author(s):  
Maria Claessen ◽  
Eszter Varga ◽  
Steven Heshusius ◽  
Esther Heideveld ◽  
Martin Hansen ◽  
...  

Abstract Transfusion of donor-derived red blood cells to aleviate anemia is the most common form of cellular therapy. In addition, red blood cells hold great promise as delivery agents of e.g. specific drugs or enzymes. However, the source depends on donor availability and carries a potential risk of alloimmunization and blood borne diseases. More than 30 bloodgroup systems encode >300 bloodgroup antigens and bloodgroup matching becomes increasingly challenging in a multiethnic society. Particularly the chronically transfused patients are at risk for alloimmunisation. In vitro cultured, customizable red blood cells (cRBC) would negate these concerns and introduce precision medicine both in transfusion medicine as well as in drug delivery applications. We aim to produce human cRBC at large-scale and cost effective, for which we need to optimize culture conditions and reduce cost-drivers. We adapted our protocols to GMP culture requirements, which reproducibly provided pure human erythroid cultures within 25 days with a 3.4x107 times expansion from peripheral blood mononuclear cells without prior CD34+ isolation. This expansion depended on the serum free medium we produce, which is supplemented with erythropoietin (Epo, 1 U/ml), stem cell factor (SCF) and glucocorticoids. Expanded erythroblasts CD71 highCD235low/- were differentiated for 10 days in medium supplemented with 5% human plasma, heparin and a higher concentration of Epo (10U/ml) yielding CD71dimCD235a+CD44+CD117-DRAQ5- cRBC. More than 90% of the cells enucleated and expressed adult hemoglobin as well as the correct blood group antigens. Passaging cRBC through a leukodepletion filter yielded 100% enucleated, stable cRBC. Deformability was measured by an Automated Rheoscope and Cell Analyser (ARCA), and oxygen equilibrium curves were measured with a Hemox analyzer. Both parameters were similar in cRBC and freshly isolated reticulocytes. RNA sequencing was performed daily during differentiation and revealed expression dynamics of important erythroid processes, e.g. increased expression of genes involved in blood group expression, globin regulation, and erythroid specific metabolic enzymes, concommittant with loss of expression of genes involved in the formation of organelles, and cell proliferation. The culture process is compatible with upscaling using 5L G-Rex bioreactors., Currently we are preparing a clinical study using biotinylated cRBC. Ultimately, however, large scale production requires an immortal source, for which we aim to use human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) established from rare donors that lack most blood group antigens. Using single cell passaging of iPSC and differentiation in colonies, we generate at average 2x105 cRBC per single iPSC. However, the cRBC cultured from iPSC were less stable following enucleation, and expressed embryonic type globins. Comparison of transcriptome data from iPSC-derived erythroid cells at distinct differentiation stages with erythroid cells at similar stages that were cultured from adult- or cord blood mononuclear cells, or from fetal liver confirmed that most iPSC-derived erythroid cells largely express an embryonic RNA profile. In conclusion, our current protocols enable us to test cRBC cultured from adult peripheral blood for their stability after transfusion. Concurrently, we develop novel bioreactors to upscale the production, and we optimise the protocol to generate cRBC from immortal iPSC lines with near 'universal donor' genotypes. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Author(s):  
Sudeep Nagaraj ◽  
Shubha Nivargi ◽  
Leelavathy Nanjappa ◽  
Jagadish Tavarekere Venkataravanappa

One step centrifugation procedure used commonly for separation of blood cells is the ficoll gradient centrifugation. In this method, after centrifugation, the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) are located on the top of the separation fluid, whereas other blood cells erythrocytes and granulocytes sediment to the bottom. In the present study 75% of lymphocyte suspension could be separated by using a one-step density gradient centrifugation of sodium heparin blood with Sucrose. Sucrose was diluted into different concentrations using miliQ water (10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%,70%, 80%, 90%, 100%,). 4 mL of diluted blood was layered on 4 mL of each sucrose solution and centrifuged for 45 minutes at 1000 rpm. Clear separation of PBMCs could be observed in solution with 40% sucrose. The separated PBMCs were analysed in haeme analyser which showed 75% lymphocytes, 23% monocytes and 2% of other cells.


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