» Articles » PMID: 7764937

Stability of Producer Hybridoma Cell Lines After Cell Sorting: a Case Study

Overview
Journal Biotechnol Prog
Date 1994 May 1
PMID 7764937
Citations 11
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Flow cytometry was used in combination with immunofluorescent staining for intracellular and surface-associated antibody contents to identify a significant non-producer cell fraction in a murine hybridoma cell line that had shown a decline in monoclonal antibody productivity with passaging. Viable producer cells stained for surface-associated antibody content were isolated by cell sorting on the basis of surface fluorescence intensity. The fraction of nonproducers was initially reduced from 85% to 20%. Sorting a second time, after these cells were cultivated for 2 weeks, further reduced the fraction of nonproducers to less than 4%. The stability of this purified producer hybridoma cell line during passaging and after a freeze-thaw cycle was investigated. This cell line was found to be highly unstable. A simple batch-growth model simulation was used as follows: (i) to demonstrate that nonproducers appear in hybridoma cell lines after a rare, random mutation event that results in the loss of the heavy-chain gene and/or light-chain gene expression; (ii) to show that a high rate of conversion of producer hybridomas to nonproducer hybridomas cannot entirely explain the population dynamics; (iii) to estimate the rate of conversion of producers to nonproducers to be 8.7 x 10(-5) h-1; (iv) to show that, for this conversion rate, the nonproducer cells' specific growth rates need only be 9% higher than those of the producer cells to dominate the hybridoma culture after only 25 passages; and (v) to predict that producer cells are preferentially lost during cell freezing and thawing procedures. The data suggest that particularly unstable cell lines should be analyzed and purified frequently to prevent overgrowth by nonproducers.

Citing Articles

Developing a secretory AcGFP1-based IRES expression system for efficient production of mammalian recombinant proteins.

Zou Z, Spencer M, Sun P Protein Expr Purif. 2021; 192:106029.

PMID: 34920134 PMC: 8864769. DOI: 10.1016/j.pep.2021.106029.


Generation of functional single-chain fragment variable from hybridoma and development of chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay for determination of total malachite green in tilapia fish.

Dong J, Li Z, Wang Y, Jin M, Shen Y, Xu Z Food Chem. 2020; 337:127780.

PMID: 32799164 PMC: 7541715. DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2020.127780.


Site-specific chromosomal gene insertion: Flp recombinase versus Cas9 nuclease.

Phan Q, Contzen J, Seemann P, Gossen M Sci Rep. 2017; 7(1):17771.

PMID: 29259215 PMC: 5736728. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-17651-0.


Use of Human Hybridoma Technology To Isolate Human Monoclonal Antibodies.

Smith S, Crowe Jr J Microbiol Spectr. 2015; 3(1):AID-0027-2014.

PMID: 26104564 PMC: 8162739. DOI: 10.1128/microbiolspec.AID-0027-2014.


Functional single-cell hybridoma screening using droplet-based microfluidics.

El Debs B, Utharala R, Balyasnikova I, Griffiths A, Merten C Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012; 109(29):11570-5.

PMID: 22753519 PMC: 3406880. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1204514109.