Comparability of automated human induced pluripotent stem cell culture: a pilot study Peter R.T. Archibald Amit Chandra Dave Thomas Olivier Chose Emmanuelle Massourides Yacine Laabi David Williams 2134/22339 https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/Comparability_of_automated_human_induced_pluripotent_stem_cell_culture_a_pilot_study/9562073 Consistent and robust manufacturing is essential for the translation of cell therapies, and the utilisation automation throughout the manufacturing process may allow for improvements in quality control, scalability, reproducibility and economics of the process. The aim of this study was to measure and establish the comparability between alternative process steps for the culture of hiPSCs. Consequently, the effects of manual centrifugation and automated non-centrifugation process steps, performed using TAP Biosystems’ CompacT SelecT automated cell culture platform, upon the culture of a human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) line (VAX001024c07) were compared. This study, has demonstrated that comparable morphologies and cell diameters were observed in hiPSCs cultured using either manual or automated process steps. However, non-centrifugation hiPSC populations exhibited greater cell yields, greater aggregate rates, increased pluripotency marker expression, and decreased differentiation marker expression compared to centrifugation hiPSCs. A trend for decreased variability in cell yield was also observed after the utilisation of the automated process step. This study also highlights the detrimental effect of the cryopreservation and thawing processes upon the growth and characteristics of hiPSC cultures, and demonstrates that automated hiPSC manufacturing protocols can be successfully transferred between independent laboratories. 2016-09-01 13:11:42 Automation Centrifugation Pluripotent stem cell Characterisation Scalable Comparability Mechanical Engineering not elsewhere classified