# Proliferation and metabolic activity of the Atlantic sturgeon cell line AOXlar7y under short-term serum-reduced conditions, and the effect of stimulation with growth factors and cytokines

**Authors:** Valeria Di Leonardo, Julia Brenmoehl, Heike Wanka, Bianka Grunow

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/ftox.2025.1636776 · Frontiers in Toxicology · 2025-10-01

## TL;DR

This study explores how reducing serum and adding growth factors affects the growth and metabolism of an Atlantic sturgeon cell line, aiming to develop animal-free cell culture methods.

## Contribution

The study characterizes the metabolic response of a sturgeon cell line to serum reduction and growth factor stimulation, supporting serum-free culture development.

## Key findings

- The sturgeon cell line adapted to serum-reduced conditions with minimal morphological changes and limited reduction in proliferation.
- Growth factors and cytokines modulated cell metabolism, revealing variable metabolic phenotypes under mitochondrial stress.
- The cell line shows potential for use in serum-free, chemically defined media for biotechnological applications.

## Abstract

Fish cell lines represent a powerful tool for studying the biology and toxicology of aquatic species in compliance with the 3Rs principles. In addition, they hold potential for more advanced biotechnological applications. However, fish cell cultures are mainly cultivated with fetal bovine serum. Therefore, in this study, we investigated the impact of serum reduction and the effects of six growth factors and cytokines on a sturgeon larval cell line (AOXla7y), which has been previously proven to be a valuable model for climate change and toxicology studies.

The serum reduction (from 10% to 5% and 2%) and the addition of two concentrations (10 and 50 ng/mL) of six growth factors and cytokines (FGF-2, IGF-1, LIF, IFN-γ, IL-13, and IL-15) to the 2% serum growth medium were evaluated over 6 days of cultivation. The morphology and cell density were determined using phasecontrast images after the experiment ended, while real-time label-free cell impedance (xCELLigence) was recorded throughout the cultivation period. Moreover, the end-point oxygen consumption in basal and uncoupled respiration conditions was analyzed with the Seahorse XF Cell Mito Stress Test Kit.

The results demonstrated a general adaptation of the sturgeon cell line to a serum-reduced environment and the modulatory effects of growth factor and cytokine supplementation on cell growth and metabolism.

These findings suggest that the sturgeon cell line has the potential to transition to a serumfree medium without major observed morphological modifications and with a limited reduction in proliferation. Its metabolism was differentially modulated by the signaling of growth factors and cytokines and exhibited a variable metabolic phenotype under mitochondrial stress. This study provides a characterization of the Atlantic sturgeon cell metabolism and offers a preliminary assessment for developing an animal-free and chemically defined medium.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** FGF2 (fibroblast growth factor 2), IGF1 (insulin like growth factor 1), LIF (LIF interleukin 6 family cytokine), IFNG (interferon gamma), IL13 (interleukin 13), IL15 (interleukin 15)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** oxygen (MESH:D010100)
- **Species:** Acipenser oxyrinchus (Atlantic sturgeon, species) [taxon 36177], Acipenser sturio (sturgeon, species) [taxon 61674]
- **Cell lines:** AOXla7y — Acipenser oxyrinchus (Atlantic sturgeon), Spontaneously immortalized cell line (CVCL_WC97)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

106 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12521256/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12521256