Title: Modern Clinical Applications of Cultured Cells
1Modern Clinical Applications of Cultured Cells
2(No Transcript)
3 I. Viral vaccine ? polio viral vaccine in
1954 ? the basis of vaccination injection
of viral antigen ?an inactivated
pathogenic virus a disease causing
virus which has been chemically
inactivated ?an attenuated live virus
capable of been propagated but has
been changed genetically so it cannot
produce disease
4General viral structure
5production of virus 1. Inoculation of virus
in to cell culture lytic cycle
adsorption, penetration, replication and release
6?Phase of viral growth in culture phase1
adsorption/ penetration phase2 synthesis
phase3 assembly phase4 release
7p.f.u. the quality of virus is usually
expressed in plaque forming unit m.o.I. the
virus is added to a cell culture at a
multiplicity of infection of 0.110 p.f.u./cell
with the expectation that this
will increase to 103- 104
p.f.u./cell
8Cell lines for vaccine production ? Normal human
diploid fibroblast example WI-38 ,
MRC-5-- human lung fibroblast
lines for poliovaccine
production ? Vero( African green monkey lines)
the first continuous cell lines
accepted as substrate for human
vaccine production
? Dangerous of using human tumorgenic cell line
? Using green monkey primary kidney cell lines
( possible contamination SV40)
9II. Monoclonal antibodies a. For diagnosis
Identification of small quantities of specific
antigens Example changes in the level of
hormones or enzyme in the
blood or urine ( pregnency test by HCG)
10b. Application as therapeutic agent i.
conjugation of cytotoxin to cancer cell surface
Example Ricin, extract from castor
bean???
11ii. Preventing immunological response of
transplantation Example OKT3
Immunosuppressant drug during transplantation
Recognize surface antigen of CD3 on
T- lymphocyte, preventing immunological
response of organ transplantation
12III. Recombinant protein Glycoprotein from
mammalian cells culture medium taken from the
cells supported viral growth could protect
cells from viral infection ( later been
identified as interferon)
1957 Isaacs and
lindenmann
13Viral ingfection blocked by Interferon
14- 1.Interferon
- a. Antiviral activity
- b. Retard the growth of tumor
- Interferon ? ( 22 subtype)
- Isolated from leukocyte from human blood in
- 1960s
- Isolated from B-lymphoblastoid cell lines( good
- production by induction by Sendai virus
- May be produced from serum free medium
- used in Leukaemia
15- Interferon ß
- ? synthesized by induction of human fibroblast
- ( by virus or double strand RNA)
- ?minimize the repressor of inducible protein
- which cause the breakdown of interferon
- mRNA
- Interferon ?
- ? Synthesized by T-lymphocyte
- Stimulated by a wide range of mitogens and
- antigens
162. Plasminogen activators ? Thrombosis
deposition of fibrin in the circulatory
system and result in the blockage of blood flow
17?produced from CHO-K1 cell by transfection
Structure of tPA
183. Blood clotting factors ?Haemophilia a sex
linked genetic disease characterized
in an inability to form fibrin due to
the absence of factor VIII and IX
?factor VIII ?glycoprotein Mr 265kDa
? cloned in 1984 ? now can be
purified by transfection of expression
vector into BHK cells
19?Therapeutic treatment regular administration
of appropriate factor purified from human
plasma ( possible contamination of HIV
or Hepatitis)
20 4. Erythropoietin( EPO) synthesized in
kidney required for red blood cell
production glycoprotein Mr 30-35kDa
produced by CHO cells
21IV. Cells as a product Artificial skin
from two layers derived from human skin ?
Dermal equivalent formed from fibroblast
tissue biopsy, medium, collagen
pour in to mould
condensation of collagen
tissue like matrix formed in 1-2 weeks
22- Epidermal-equivalent which is layered on the
dermal - surface
- keratinocyte grow on the surface of dermal
equivalent
23V. Artificial organs
- Organ Culture techniques in tissue banking
- ? Minimize the risk of disease transmission
- via tissue graft
- ? Use of appropriate methods of storage for
tissue
24Common cause of neurotropic corneal
disease ?Corneal nerve injury and disease ( virus
infection, surgery) ? Trauma to ocular nerves
by laser or surgery
25- Cornea storage by organ culture
- Cleaning of eye
- Excision of corneoscleral disc?????
- Suspension of corneoscleral disc in organ culture
- medium
- Testing medium for bacterial or fungal infection
- Examination of corneal endothelium
- Reversal of stromal edema before transplantation
26 VI. Drug screening and toxicity tests ?
Reduced growth rate ? Breakdown of membrane
permeability ? Tissue specific response
? Ability to metabolize toxic compound ?
Stimulated wound healing ? Damage repair by
use of artificial constructed ? Tissue
genetic effects/ mutagenecity, ?
Interaction with DNA
27VII. Gene therapy Transfection of a
specific gene into cells isolated from a
patient suffering from a well-characterized
genetic disease.
28example for sickle cell anemia or thalassaemia
Haemopoietic cells isolated from bone
marrow Transfection with normal
globin gene by retroviral vector
Reintroduce into bone marrow
29VIII. Risks associated with cell culture
products 1. Viruses retrovirus
tumorgenic 2. Transforming proteins
products of oncogenes, tumorgenic and
growth promoting
303. Residual cellular DNA reduce cell
products to 1pg/ml for safety, DNA content
of , 10pg/dose