The genomic sequence of the Chinese hamster ovary (CHO)-K1 cell line

Xun Xu(BGI Group (China)), Harish Nagarajan, Nathan E. Lewis, Shengkai Pan(BGI Group (China)), Zhiming Cai(University of Hong Kong - Shenzhen Hospital), Xin Liu(BGI Group (China)), Wenbin Chen(BGI Group (China)), Min Xie(BGI Group (China)), Wenliang Wang(BGI Group (China)), Stephanie Hammond(University of Delaware), Mikael Rørdam Andersen(Technical University of Denmark), Norma Neff(Stanford University), Benedetto Passarelli(Stanford University), Winston Koh(Stanford University), H. Christina Fan(Stanford University), Jianbin Wang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yaoting Gui(Peking University Shenzhen Hospital), Kelvin H. Lee(Biotechnology Institute), Michael J. Betenbaugh(Novo Nordisk Foundation), Stephen R. Quake(Stanford University), Iman Famili, Bernhard Ø. Palsson(Technical University of Denmark), Jun Wang(University of Copenhagen)
Nature Biotechnology
July 31, 2011
Cited by 792Open Access
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Abstract

Since 1987, immortalized cells from the ovary of a Chinese hamster have been the workhorse for producing recombinant therapeutics, including monoclonal antibodies, blood factors, hormones, growth factors and enzymes. Xu et al. provide the genome sequence of the ancestral CHO-K1 cell line, which should aid in the optimization of current production cell lines. Chinese hamster ovary (CHO)–derived cell lines are the preferred host cells for the production of therapeutic proteins. Here we present a draft genomic sequence of the CHO-K1 ancestral cell line. The assembly comprises 2.45 Gb of genomic sequence, with 24,383 predicted genes. We associate most of the assembled scaffolds with 21 chromosomes isolated by microfluidics to identify chromosomal locations of genes. Furthermore, we investigate genes involved in glycosylation, which affect therapeutic protein quality, and viral susceptibility genes, which are relevant to cell engineering and regulatory concerns. Homologs of most human glycosylation-associated genes are present in the CHO-K1 genome, although 141 of these homologs are not expressed under exponential growth conditions. Many important viral entry genes are also present in the genome but not expressed, which may explain the unusual viral resistance property of CHO cell lines. We discuss how the availability of this genome sequence may facilitate genome-scale science for the optimization of biopharmaceutical protein production.


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