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Multiplex genome editing of mammalian cells for producing recombinant heparin

Authors :
Bryan E. Thacker
Kristen J. Thorne
Colin Cartwright
Jeeyoung Park
Kimberly Glass
Annie Chea
Benjamin P. Kellman
Nathan E. Lewis
Zhenping Wang
Anna Di Nardo
Susan T. Sharfstein
Walter Jeske
Jeanine Walenga
John Hogwood
Elaine Gray
Barbara Mulloy
Jeffrey D. Esko
Charles A. Glass
Source :
Metabolic Engineering. 70:155-165
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Heparin is an essential anticoagulant used for treating and preventing thrombosis. However, the complexity of heparin has hindered the development of a recombinant source, making its supply dependent on a vulnerable animal population. In nature, heparin is produced exclusively in mast cells, which are not suitable for commercial production, but mastocytoma cells are readily grown in culture and make heparan sulfate, a closely related glycosaminoglycan that lacks anticoagulant activity. Using gene expression profiling of mast cells as a guide, a multiplex genome engineering strategy was devised to produce heparan sulfate with high anticoagulant potency and to eliminate contaminating chondroitin sulfate from mastocytoma cells. The heparan sulfate purified from engineered cells grown in chemically defined medium has anticoagulant potency that exceeds porcine-derived heparin and confers anticoagulant activity to the blood of healthy mice. This work demonstrates the feasibility of producing recombinant heparin from mammalian cell culture as an alternative to animal sources.

Details

ISSN :
10967176
Volume :
70
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Metabolic Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ca4eb39db7acb0dc166acf6cadcd29e8