Stem Cell Reports (Jul 2017)

CryoPause: A New Method to Immediately Initiate Experiments after Cryopreservation of Pluripotent Stem Cells

  • Karen G. Wong,
  • Sean D. Ryan,
  • Kiran Ramnarine,
  • Siera A. Rosen,
  • Shannon E. Mann,
  • Amanda Kulick,
  • Elisa De Stanchina,
  • Franz-Josef Müller,
  • Thadeous J. Kacmarczyk,
  • Chao Zhang,
  • Doron Betel,
  • Mark J. Tomishima

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stemcr.2017.05.010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 355 – 365

Abstract

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Human pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) provide an unlimited cell source for cell therapies and disease modeling. Despite their enormous power, technical aspects have hampered reproducibility. Here, we describe a modification of PSC workflows that eliminates a major variable for nearly all PSC experiments: the quality and quantity of the PSC starting material. Most labs continually passage PSCs and use small quantities after expansion, but the “just-in-time” nature of these experiments means that quality control rarely happens before use. Lack of quality control could compromise PSC quality, sterility, and genetic integrity, which creates a variable that might affect results. This method, called CryoPause, banks PSCs as single-use, cryopreserved vials that can be thawed and immediately used in experiments. Each CryoPause bank provides a consistent source of PSCs that can be pre-validated before use to reduce the possibility that high levels of spontaneous differentiation, contamination, or genetic integrity will compromise an experiment.

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