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Systematic investigation of oxygen and growth factors in clinically valid ex vivo expansion of cord blood CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells

journal contribution
posted on 2012-07-01, 00:00 authored by M Tursky, Fiona Collier, Alister WardAlister Ward, M Kirkland
Background aims. Cord blood is considered to be a superior source of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells for transplantation, but clinical use is limited primarily because of the low numbers of cells harvested. Ex vivo expansion has the potential to provide a safe, effective means of increasing cell numbers. However, an absence of consensus regarding optimum expansion conditions prevents standard implementation. Many studies lack clinical applicability, or have failed to investigate the combinational effects of different parameters.

Methods. This is the first study to characterize systematically the effect of growth factor combinations across multiple oxygen levels on the ex vivo expansion of cord blood CD34 hematopoietic cells utilizing clinically approvable reagents and methodologies throughout.

Results. Optimal fold expansion, as assessed both phenotypically and functionally, was greatest with thrombopoietin, stem cell factor, Flt-3 ligand and interleukin-6 at an oxygen level of 10%. With these conditions, serial expansion showed continual target population expansion and consistently higher expression levels of self-renewal associated genes.

Conclusions. This study has identified optimized fold expansion conditions, with the potential for direct clinical translation to increase transplantable cell dose and as a baseline methodology against which future factors can be tested.

History

Journal

Cytotherapy

Volume

14

Issue

6

Pagination

679 - 685

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Oxford, England

ISSN

1465-3249

eISSN

1477-2566

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal