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Tenneille Ludwig

Researcher at WiCell

Publications -  41
Citations -  5407

Tenneille Ludwig is an academic researcher from WiCell. The author has contributed to research in topics: Embryonic stem cell & Stem cell. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 39 publications receiving 5078 citations. Previous affiliations of Tenneille Ludwig include University of Wisconsin-Madison & Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation.

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Derivation of human embryonic stem cells in defined conditions.

TL;DR: Feeder-independent human ES cell culture that includes protein components solely derived from recombinant sources or purified from human material is reported.
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Basic FGF and suppression of BMP signaling sustain undifferentiated proliferation of human ES cells

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that hESCs cultured in unconditioned medium (UM) are subjected to high levels of B MP signaling activity, which is reduced in CM, and the BMP antagonist noggin synergizes with basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) to repress BMP signaling and sustain undifferentiated proliferation of hESC in the absence of fibroblasts or CM.
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Feeder-independent culture of human embryonic stem cells.

TL;DR: Modifications to the medium (mTeSR1) that include the use of animal-sourced proteins (bovine serum albumin (BSA) and Matrigel) and cloned zebrafish basic fibroblast growth factor (zbFGF) are described.
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Screening ethnically diverse human embryonic stem cells identifies a chromosome 20 minimal amplicon conferring growth advantage

Katherine Amps, +124 more
- 27 Nov 2011 - 
TL;DR: Of these genes, BCL2L1 is a strong candidate for driving culture adaptation of ES cells, and single-nucleotide polymorphism analysis revealed that they included representatives of most major ethnic groups.
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Basic fibroblast growth factor support of human embryonic stem cell self-renewal.

TL;DR: Comparing the ability of unconditioned medium (UM) supplemented with 4, 24, 40, 80, 100, and 250 ng/ml FGF2 to sustain low‐density human ES cell cultures through multiple passages suggests that fibroblasts and fibroblast‐conditioned medium sustain human ES cells in part by stabilizing FGF signaling above a critical threshold.