Development Of A Targeted Integration Chinese Hamster Ovary Host Directly Targeting Either One Or Two Vectors Simultaneously To A Single Locus Using The Cre/Lox Recombinase-Mediated Cassette Exchange System

BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS(2021)

Cited 19|Views4
No score
Abstract
Cell line development (CLD) by random integration (RI) can be labor intensive, inconsistent, and unpredictable due to uncontrolled gene integration after transfection. Unlike RI, targeted integration (TI) based CLD introduces the antibody-expressing cassette to a predetermined site by recombinase-mediated cassette exchange (RMCE). The key to success for the development of a TI host for therapeutic antibody production is to identify a transcriptionally active hotspot that enables highly efficient RMCE and antibody expression with good stability. In this study, a genome wide search for hotspots in the Chinese hamster ovary (CHO)-K1-M genome by either RI or PiggyBac (PB) transposase-based integration has been described. Two CHO-K1-M derived TI host cells were established with the Cre/Lox RMCE system and are described here. Both TI hosts contain a GFP-expressing landing pad flanked by two incompatible LoxP recombination sites (L3 and 2L). In addition, a third incompatible LoxP site (LoxFAS) is inserted in the GFP landing pad to enable an innovative two-plasmid based RMCE strategy, in which two separate vectors can be targeted to a single locus simultaneously. Cell lines generated by the TI system exhibit comparable or higher productivity, better stability and fewer sequence variant (SV) occurrences than the RI cell lines.
More
Translated text
Key words
cell line development (CLD), PiggyBac (PB), random integration (RI), recombinase&#8208, mediated cassette exchange (RMCE), targeted integration (TI)
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined