4 Papers
2 Citations
Sabine Vcelar is an academic researcher from University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chinese hamster ovary cell & Population. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Changes in Chromosome Counts and Patterns in CHO Cell Lines upon Generation of Recombinant Cell Lines and Subcloning
Sabine Vcelar,Michael Melcher,Norbert Auer,Astrid Hrdina,Anja Puklowski,Friedrich Leisch,Vaibhav Jadhav,Till Wenger,Martina Baumann,Nicole Borth +9 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that the process of subcloning itself does not contribute to an improved karyotypic homogeneity of a population, while the selection for a specific cell property inherently can provide evolutionary pressure that may lead to improved chromosomal stability as well as to a more homogenous population.
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ChromaWizard: An open source image analysis software for multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis.
Norbert Auer,Astrid Hrdina,Chaitra Hiremath,Sabine Vcelar,Martina Baumann,Nicole Borth,Vaibhav Jadhav +6 more
TL;DR: A publically available open source software that combines flexibility and customizable functionalities is presented, called “ChromaWizard” which is based on popular scientific image analysis libraries (OpenCV, scikit‐image, and NumPy), and demonstrated on the example of primary Chinese hamster fibroblasts metaphase spreads.
Karyotype variation of CHO host cell lines over time in culture characterized by chromosome counting and chromosome painting.
Sabine Vcelar,Vaibhav Jadhav,Michael Melcher,Norbert Auer,Astrid Hrdina,Rebecca Sagmeister,Kelley M. Heffner,Anja Puklowski,Michael J. Betenbaugh,Till Wenger,Friedrich Leisch,Martina Baumann,Nicole Borth +12 more
TL;DR: Using the population distribution of chromosome numbers per cell as well as chromosome painting to quantify the karyotypic variation in several CHO host cell lines revealed a predominant karyotype for each cell line at the start of the experiment, completed by a large number of variants present in each population.