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BHK Cells (bhk + cell)
Selected AbstractsThe A-subunit of surface-bound Shiga toxin stimulates clathrin-dependent uptake of the toxinFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 16 2005Maria L. Torgersen Shiga toxin can be internalized by clathrin-dependent endocytosis in different cell lines, although it binds specifically to the glycosphingolipid Gb3. It has been demonstrated previously that the toxin can induce recruitment of the toxin,receptor complex to clathrin-coated pits, but whether this process is concentration-dependent or which part of the toxin molecule is involved in this process, have so far been unresolved issues. In this article, we show that the rate of Shiga toxin uptake is dependent on the toxin concentration in several cell lines [HEp-2, HeLa, Vero and baby hamster kidney (BHK)], and that the increased rate observed at higher concentrations is strictly dependent on the presence of the A-subunit of cell surface-bound toxin. Surface-bound B-subunit has no stimulatory effect. Furthermore, this increase in toxin endocytosis is dependent on functional clathrin, as it did not occur in BHK cells after induction of antisense to clathrin heavy chain, thereby blocking clathrin-dependent endocytosis. By immunofluorescence, we show that there is an increased colocalization between Alexa-labeled Shiga toxin and Cy5-labeled transferrin in HeLa cells upon addition of unlabeled toxin. In conclusion, the data indicate that the Shiga toxin A-subunit of cell surface-bound toxin stimulates clathrin-dependent uptake of the toxin. Possible explanations for this phenomenon are discussed. [source] Adenosine modulates cell growth in baby hamster kidney (BHK) cellsBIOFACTORS, Issue 4 2000Rashmi A. Mittal Abstract Adenosine is known to modulate cell growth in a variety of mammalian cells either via the activation of receptors or through metabolism. We investigated the effect of adenosine on Baby Hamster Kidney (BHK) cell growth and attempted to determine its mechanism of modulation. In wild-type BHK cells, adenosine evoked a biphasic response in which a low concentration of adenosine (1± 150;5 ,M) produced an inhibition of colony formation but at higher concentrations (up to 50 ,M) this inhibition was progressively reversed. However, no biphasic response was observed in an ± 147;adenosine kinase± 148; deficient BHK mutant, ± 147;5a± 148;, which suggests that adenosine kinase plays an important role in the modulation of growth response to adenosine. Adenosine receptors did not appear to have a role in regulating cell growth of BHK cells. Specific A1 and A2 receptor antagonists were unable to reverse the effect of adenosine on cell growth. Even though a specific A3 adenosine receptor antagonist MRS-1220 partly reversed the inhibition in colony formation at 1 ,M adenosine, it also affected the transport of adenosine. Thus adenosine transport and metabolism appears to play the major role in this modulation of cell growth as 5,-amino-5,-deoxyadenosine, an adenosine kinase inhibitor, reversed the inhibition of cell growth observed at 1 ,M adenosine. These results, taken together, would suggest that adenosine modulates cell growth in BHK mainly through its transport and metabolism to adenine nucleotides. [source] Anti-apoptotic genes Aven and E1B-19K enhance performance of BHK cells engineered to express recombinant factor VIII in batch and low perfusion cell cultureBIOTECHNOLOGY & BIOENGINEERING, Issue 4 2007Toey Nivitchanyong Abstract The engineering of production cell lines to express anti-apoptotic genes has been pursued in recent years due to potential process benefits, including enhanced cell survival, increased protein expression, and improved product quality. In this study, a baby hamster kidney cell line secreting recombinant factor VIII (BHK-FVIII) was engineered to express the anti-apoptotic genes Aven and E1B-19K. In high cell density shake flask culture evaluation, 11 clonal cell lines expressing either E1B-19K or a combination of Aven and E1B-19K showed improved survival compared to both parental and blank vector cell line controls. These cell lines exhibited lower caspase-3 activation and reduced Annexin-V binding compared to the controls. Parental and blank vector cell lines were less than 50% viable after 48 h of exposure to thapsigargin while cell lines expressing E1B-19K with or without Aven maintained viabilities approaching 90%. Subsequently, the best Aven-E1B-19K candidate cell line was compared to the parental cell line in 12-L perfusion bioreactor studies. Choosing the appropriate perfusion rates in bioreactors is a bioprocess optimization issue, so the bioreactors were operated at sequentially lower specific perfusion rates, while maintaining a cell density of 2,×,107 viable cells/mL. The viability of the parental cell line declined from nearly 100% at a perfusion rate of 0.5 nL/cell/day to below 80% viability, with caspase-3 activity exceeding 15%, at its lower perfusion limit of 0.15 nL/cell/day. In contrast, the Aven-E1B-19K cell line maintained an average viability of 94% and a maximum caspase-3 activity of 2.5% even when subjected to a lower perfusion minimum of 0.1 nL/cell/day. Factor VIII productivity, specific growth rate, and cell size decreased for both cell lines at lower perfusion rates, but the drop in all cases was larger for the parental cell line. Specific consumption of glucose and glutamine and production of lactate were consistently lower for the Aven-E1B-19K culture. Furthermore, the yield of ammonia from glutamine increased for the Aven-E1B-19K cell line relative to the parent to suggest altered metabolic pathways following anti-apoptosis engineering. These results demonstrate that expression of anti-apoptotic genes Aven and E1B-19K can increase the stability and robustness of an industrially relevant BHK-FVIII mammalian cell line over a wide range of perfusion rates. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2007; 98: 825,841. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] |