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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter August 4, 2011

Improved lentiviral gene transfer into human embryonic stem cells grown in co-culture with murine feeder and stroma cells

  • Melanie Wurm , Benjamin Groß , Malte Sgodda , Ludger Ständker , Thomas Müller , Wolf-Georg Forssmann , Peter A. Horn , Rainer Blasczyk and Tobias Cantz EMAIL logo
From the journal Biological Chemistry

Abstract

Genetic modification of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) using biophysical DNA transfection methods are hampered by the very low single cell survival rate and cloning efficiency of hESCs. Lentiviral gene transfer strategies are widely used to genetically modify hESCs but limited transduction efficiencies in the presence of feeder or stroma cells present problems, particularly if vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein (VSV-G) pseudotyped viral particles are applied. Here, we investigated whether the recently described semen derived enhancer of virus infection (SEVI) and alternative viral envelope proteins derived from either Gibbon ape leukaemia virus (GALV) or feline leukaemia virus (RD114) are applicable for transducing hESCs during co-culture with feeder or stroma cells. Our first set of experiments demonstrates that SEVI has no toxic effect on murine or hESCs and that exposure to SEVI does not interfere with the pluripotency-associated phenotype. Focusing on hESCs, we were able to further demonstrate that SEVI increases the transduction efficiencies of GALV and RD114 pseudotyped lentiviral vectors. More importantly, aiming at targeted differentiation of hESCs into functional somatic cell types, GALV pseudotyped lentiviral particles could efficiently and exclusively transduce hESCs grown in co-culture with OP9-GFP stroma cells (which were often used to induce differentiation into haematopoietic derivatives).


Corresponding author

Received: 2011-4-19
Accepted: 2011-6-27
Published Online: 2011-8-4
Published in Print: 2011-10-1

©2011 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

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