Sensor macrophages derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells to assess pyrogenic contaminations in parenteral drugs

Author:

Abdin Shifaa MORCID,Mansel Friederike,Hashtchin Anna Rafiei,Ackermann Mania,Hansen Gesine,Becker Björn,Kick Benjamin,Pham Nhi,Dietz Hendrik,Schaniel Christoph,Martin Ulrich,Spreitzer Ingo,Lachmann Nico

Abstract

Abstract Ensuring the safety of parenteral drugs before injection into patients is of utmost importance. New regulations around the globe and the need to refrain from using animals however, have highlighted the need for new cell sources to be used in next-generation bioassays to detect the entire spectrum of possible contaminating pyrogens. Given the current drawbacks of the Monocyte-Activation-Test (MAT) with respect to the use of primary peripheral blood mono-nuclear cells or the use of monocytic cell lines, we here demonstrate the manufacturing of sensor monocytes/macrophages from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iMonoMac), which are fully defined and superior to current cell products. Using a modern and scalable manufacturing platform, iMonoMac showed typical macrophage-like morphology and stained positive for several Toll like receptor (TLRs) such as TLR-2, TLR-5, TLR-4. Furthermore, iMonoMac derived from the same donor were sensitive to endotoxins, non-endotoxins, and process related pyrogens at a high dynamic range and across different cellular densities. Of note, iMonoMac showed increased sensitivity and reactivity to a broad range of pyrogens, demonstrated by the detection of interleukin-6 at low concentrations of LPS and MALP-2 which could not be reached using the current MAT cell sources. To further advance the system, iMonoMac or genetically engineered iMonoMac with NF-κB-luciferase reporter cassette could reveal a specific activation response while correlating to the classical detection method employing enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to measure cytokine secretion. Thus, we present a valuable cellular tool to assess parenteral drugs safety, facilitating the future acceptance and design of regulatory-approved bioassays.

Funder

REBIRTH Research Center for Translational Regenerative Medicine “Förderung aus Mitteln des Niedersächsischen Vorab”

the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program

the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union (EU)’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program

German Center for Lung Research

Federal State of Lower Saxony

Publisher

IOP Publishing

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