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1.
High‐throughput systems and processes have typically been targeted for process development and optimization in the bioprocessing industry. For process characterization, bench scale bioreactors have been the system of choice. Due to the need for performing different process conditions for multiple process parameters, the process characterization studies typically span several months and are considered time and resource intensive. In this study, we have shown the application of a high‐throughput mini‐bioreactor system viz. the Advanced Microscale Bioreactor (ambr15TM), to perform process characterization in less than a month and develop an input control strategy. As a pre‐requisite to process characterization, a scale‐down model was first developed in the ambr system (15 mL) using statistical multivariate analysis techniques that showed comparability with both manufacturing scale (15,000 L) and bench scale (5 L). Volumetric sparge rates were matched between ambr and manufacturing scale, and the ambr process matched the pCO2 profiles as well as several other process and product quality parameters. The scale‐down model was used to perform the process characterization DoE study and product quality results were generated. Upon comparison with DoE data from the bench scale bioreactors, similar effects of process parameters on process yield and product quality were identified between the two systems. We used the ambr data for setting action limits for the critical controlled parameters (CCPs), which were comparable to those from bench scale bioreactor data. In other words, the current work shows that the ambr15TM system is capable of replacing the bench scale bioreactor system for routine process development and process characterization. © 2015 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 31:1623–1632, 2015  相似文献   

2.
The aim of this study was to improve l ‐lactic acid production of Lactobacillus thermophilus SRZ50. For this purpose, high efficient heavy‐ion mutagenesis technique was performed using SRZ50 as the original strain. To enhance the screening efficiency for high yield l ‐lactic acid producers, a scale‐down from shake flask to microtiter plate was developed. The results showed that 24‐well U‐bottom MTPs could well alternate shake flasks for L. thermophilus cultivation as a scale‐down tool due to its a very good comparability to the shake flasks. Based on this microtiter plate screening method, two high l ‐lactic acid productivity mutants, A59 and A69, were successfully screened out, which presented, respectively, 15.8 and 16.2% higher productivities than that of the original strain. Based on fed‐batch fermentation, the A69 mutant can accumulate 114.2 g/L l ‐lactic acid at 96 h. Hence, the proposed traditional microbial breeding method with efficient high‐throughput screening assay was proved to be an appropriate strategy to obtain lactic acid‐overproducing strain.  相似文献   

3.
With increasing timeline pressures to get therapeutic and vaccine candidates into the clinic, resource intensive approaches such as the use of shake flasks and bench‐top bioreactors may limit the design space for experimentation to yield highly productive processes. The need to conduct large numbers of experiments has resulted in the use of miniaturized high‐throughput (HT) technology for process development. One such high‐throughput system is the SimCell? platform, a robotically driven, cell culture bioreactor system developed by BioProcessors Corp. This study describes the use of the SimCell? micro‐bioreactor technology for fed‐batch cultivation of a GS‐CHO transfectant expressing a model IgG4 monoclonal antibody. Cultivations were conducted in gas‐permeable chambers based on a micro‐fluidic design, with six micro‐bioreactors (MBs) per micro‐bioreactor array (MBA). Online, non‐invasive measurement of total cell density, pH and dissolved oxygen (DO) was performed. One hundred fourteen parallel MBs (19 MBAs) were employed to examine process reproducibility and scalability at shake flask, 3‐ and 100‐L bioreactor scales. The results of the study demonstrate that the SimCell? platform operated under fed‐batch conditions could support viable cell concentrations up to least 12 × 106 cells/mL. In addition, both intra‐MB (MB to MB) as well as intra‐MBA (MBA to MBA) culture performance was found to be highly reproducible. The intra‐MB and ‐MBA variability was calculated for each measurement as the coefficient of variation defined as CV (%) = (standard deviation/mean) × 100. The % CV values for most intra‐MB and intra‐MBA measurements were generally under 10% and the intra‐MBA values were slightly lower than those for intra‐MB. Cell growth, process parameters, metabolic and protein titer profiles were also compared to those from shake flask, bench‐top, and pilot scale bioreactor cultivations and found to be within ±20% of the historical averages. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2010; 106: 57–67. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
Large‐scale bioreactors for the production of monoclonal antibodies reach volumes of up to 25 000 L. With increasing bioreactor size, mixing is however affected negatively, resulting in the formation of gradients throughout the reactor. These gradients can adversely affect process performance at large scale. Since mammalian cells are sensitive to changes in pH, this study investigated the effects of pH gradients on process performance. A 2‐Compartment System was established for this purpose to expose only a fraction of the cell population to pH excursions and thereby mimicking a large‐scale bioreactor. Cells were exposed to repeated pH amplitudes of 0.4 units (pH 7.3), which resulted in decreased viable cell counts, as well as the inhibition of the lactate metabolic shift. These effects were furthermore accompanied by increased absolute lactate levels. Continuous assessment of molecular attributes of the expressed target protein revealed that subunit assembly or N‐glycosylation patterns were only slightly influenced by the pH excursions. The exposure of more cells to the same pH amplitudes further impaired process performance, indicating this is an important factor, which influences the impact of pH inhomogeneity. This knowledge can aid in the design of pH control strategies to minimize the effects of pH inhomogeneity in large‐scale bioreactors.  相似文献   

5.
6.
An ultra scale‐down primary recovery sequence was established for a platform E. coli Fab production process. It was used to evaluate the process robustness of various bioengineered strains. Centrifugal discharge in the initial dewatering stage was determined to be the major cause of cell breakage. The ability of cells to resist breakage was dependant on a combination of factors including host strain, vector, and fermentation strategy. Periplasmic extraction studies were conducted in shake flasks and it was demonstrated that key performance parameters such as Fab titre and nucleic acid concentrations were mimicked. The shake flask system also captured particle aggregation effects seen in a large scale stirred vessel, reproducing the fine particle size distribution that impacts the final centrifugal clarification stage. The use of scale‐down primary recovery process sequences can be used to screen a larger number of engineered strains. This can lead to closer integration with and better feedback between strain development, fermentation development, and primary recovery studies. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2014;111: 1971–1981. © 2014 The Authors. Biotechnology and Bioengineering Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
Actinobacteria are prolific producers of secondary metabolites and industrially relevant enzymes. Growth of these mycelial micro-organisms in small culture volumes is challenging due to their complex morphology. Since morphology and production are typically linked, scaling down culture volumes requires better control over morphogenesis. In larger scale platforms, ranging from shake flasks to bioreactors, the hydrodynamics play an important role in shaping the morphology and determining product formation. Here, we report on the effects of agitation on the mycelial morphology of Streptomyces lividans grown in microtitre plates. Our work shows that at the appropriate agitation rates cultures can be scaled down to volumes as small as 100 µl while maintaining the same morphology as seen in larger scale platforms. Using image analysis and principal component analysis we compared the morphologies of the cultures; when agitated at 1400–1600 rpm the mycelial morphology in micro-cultures was similar to that obtained in shake flasks, while product formation was also maintained. Our study shows that the morphology of actinobacteria in micro-cultures can be controlled in a similar manner as in larger scale cultures by carefully controlling the mixing rate. This could facilitate high-throughput screening and upscaling.  相似文献   

8.
Ultra scale‐down approaches represent valuable methods for chromatography development work in the biopharmaceutical sector, but for them to be of value, scale‐down mimics must predict large‐scale process performance accurately. For example, one application of a scale‐down model involves using it to predict large‐scale elution profiles correctly with respect to the size of a product peak and its position in a chromatogram relative to contaminants. Predicting large‐scale profiles from data generated by small laboratory columns is complicated, however, by differences in dispersion and retention volumes between the two scales of operation. Correcting for these effects would improve the accuracy of the scale‐down models when predicting outputs such as eluate volumes at larger scale and thus enable the efficient design and operation of subsequent steps. This paper describes a novel ultra scale‐down approach which uses empirical correlations derived from conductivity changes during operation of laboratory and pilot columns to correct chromatographic profiles for the differences in dispersion and retention. The methodology was tested by using 1 mL column data to predict elution profiles of a chimeric monoclonal antibody obtained from Protein A chromatography columns at 3 mL laboratory‐ and 18.3 L pilot‐scale. The predictions were then verified experimentally. Results showed that the empirical corrections enabled accurate estimations of the characteristics of larger‐scale elution profiles. These data then provide the justification to adjust small‐scale conditions to achieve an eluate volume and product concentration which is consistent with that obtained at large‐scale and which can then be used for subsequent ultra scale‐down operations. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2009  相似文献   

9.
Efficient and effective cell line screening is paramount toward a successful biomanufacturing program. Here we describe the implementation of 24‐deep well plate (24‐DWP) screening of CHO lines as part of the cell line development platform at AbbVie. Incorporation of this approach accelerated the identification of the best candidate lines for process development. In an effort to quantify and predict process performance comparability, we compared cell culture performance in and in shake flasks, for a panel of Chinese Hamster Ovary cell lines expressing a monoclonal antibody. The results in 24‐DWP screening showed reduced growth profiles, but comparable viability profiles. Slow growers in 24‐DWP achieved the highest productivity improvement upon scaling‐up to shake flasks. Product quality of the protein purified from shake flasks and 24‐DWP were also compared. The 24‐DWP culture conditions were found to influence the levels of acidic species, reduce the G0 N‐glycan species, and increase the high‐mannose N‐glycan species. Nevertheless, the identification of undesirable profiles is executed consistently with the scaled‐up culture. We further employed multivariate data analysis to capture differences depending on the two scales and we could demonstrate that cell line profiles were adequately clustered, regardless of the vessel used for the development. In conclusion, the 24‐DWP platform was reasonably predictive of the parameters crucial for upstream process development activities, and has been adapted as part of the AbbVie cell line development platform. © 2017 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 34:175–186, 2018  相似文献   

10.
While wave‐mixed and stirred bag bioreactors are common devices for rapid, safe insect cell culture‐based production at liter‐scale, orbitally shaken disposable flasks are mainly used for screening studies at milliliter‐scale. In contrast to the two aforementioned bag bioreactor types, which can be operated with standard or disposable sensors, shaker flasks have not been instrumented until recently. The combination of 250 mL disposable shake flasks with PreSens's Shake Flask Reader enables both pH and dissolved oxygen to be measured, as well as allowing characterization of oxygen mass transfer. Volumetric oxygen transfer coefficients (kLa‐values) for PreSens 250 mL disposable shake flasks, which were determined for the first time in insect cell culture medium at varying culture volumes and shaker frequencies, ranged between 4.4 and 37.9/h. Moreover, it was demonstrated that online monitoring of dissolved oxygen in shake flasks is relevant for limitation‐free growth of insect cells up to high cell densities in batch mode (1.6×107 cells/mL) and for the efficient expression of an intracellular model protein.  相似文献   

11.
The ambr bioreactors are single‐use microbioreactors for cell line development and process optimization. With operating conditions for large‐scale biopharmaceutical production properly scaled down, microbioreactors such as the ambr15? can potentially be used to predict the effect of process changes such as modified media or different cell lines. While there have been some recent studies evaluating the ambr15? technology as a scale‐down model for fed‐batch operations, little has been reported for semi‐continuous or continuous operation. Gassing rates and dilution rates in the ambr15? were varied in this study to attempt to replicate performance of a perfusion process at the 5 L scale. At both scales, changes to metabolite production and consumption, and cell growth rate and therapeutic protein production were measured. Conditions were identified in the ambr15? bioreactor that produced metabolic shifts and specific metabolic and protein production rates that are characteristic of the corresponding 5 L perfusion process. A dynamic flux balance (DFB) model was employed to understand and predict the metabolic changes observed. The DFB model predicted trends observed experimentally, including lower specific glucose consumption and a switch from lactate production to consumption when dissolved CO2 was maintained at higher levels in the broth. © 2017 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 34:420–431, 2018  相似文献   

12.
Bioprocess scale‐up is a fundamental component of process development in the biotechnology industry. When scaling up a mammalian cell culture process, it is important to consider factors such as mixing time, oxygen transfer, and carbon dioxide removal. In this study, cell‐free mixing studies were performed in production scale 5,000‐L bioreactors to evaluate scale‐up issues. Using the current bioreactor configuration, the 5,000‐L bioreactor had a lower oxygen transfer coefficient, longer mixing time, and lower carbon dioxide removal rate than that was observed in bench scale 5‐ and 20‐L bioreactors. The oxygen transfer threshold analysis indicates that the current 5,000‐L configuration can only support a maximum viable cell density of 7 × 106 cells mL?1. Moreover, experiments using a dual probe technique demonstrated that pH and dissolved oxygen gradients may exist in 5,000‐L bioreactors using the current configuration. Empirical equations were developed to predict mixing time, oxygen transfer coefficient, and carbon dioxide removal rate under different mixing‐related engineering parameters in the 5,000‐L bioreactors. These equations indicate that increasing bottom air sparging rate is more efficient than increasing power input in improving oxygen transfer and carbon dioxide removal. Furthermore, as the liquid volume increases in a production bioreactor operated in fed‐batch mode, bulk mixing becomes a challenge. The mixing studies suggest that the engineering parameters related to bulk mixing and carbon dioxide removal in the 5,000‐L bioreactors may need optimizing to mitigate the risk of different performance upon process scale‐up. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009;103: 733–746. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Anoxic and metabolic stresses in large‐scale cell culture during biopharmaceutical production can induce apoptosis. Strategies designed to ameliorate the problem of apoptosis in cell culture have focused on mRNA knockdown of pro‐apoptotic proteins and over‐expression of anti‐apoptotic ones. Apoptosis in cell culture involves mitochondrial permeabilization by the pro‐apoptotic Bak and Bax proteins; activity of either protein is sufficient to permit apoptosis. We demonstrate here the complete and permanent elimination of both the Bak and Bax proteins in combination in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells using zinc‐finger nuclease‐mediated gene disruption. Zinc‐finger nuclease cleavage of BAX and BAK followed by inaccurate DNA repair resulted in knockout of both genes. Cells lacking Bax and Bak grow normally but fail to activate caspases in response to apoptotic stimuli. When grown using scale‐down systems under conditions that mimic growth in large‐scale bioreactors they are significantly more resistant to apoptosis induced by starvation, staurosporine, and sodium butyrate. When grown under starvation conditions, BAX‐ and BAK‐deleted cells produce two‐ to fivefold more IgG than wild‐type CHO cells. Under normal growth conditions in suspension culture in shake flasks, double‐knockout cultures achieve equal or higher cell densities than unmodified wild‐type cultures and reach viable cell densities relevant for large‐scale industrial protein production. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2010; 105: 330–340. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Poly(γ‐glutamic acid) (γ‐PGA) is a promising biopolymer with many potential industrial and pharmaceutical applications. To reduce the production costs, the effects of yeast extract and L ‐glutamate in the substrate for γ‐PGA production were investigated systematically at shake flask scale. The results showed that lower concentrations of yeast extract (40 g/L) and L ‐glutamate (30 g/L) were beneficial for the cost‐effective production of γ‐PGA in the formulated medium. By maintaining the glucose concentration in the range of 3–10 g/L via a fed‐batch strategy in a 10‐L fermentor, the production of γ‐PGA was greatly improved with the highest γ‐PGA concentration of 101.1 g/L, a productivity of 2.19 g/L·h and a yield of 0.57 g/g total substrate, which is about 1.4‐ to 3.2‐fold higher than those in the batch fermentation. Finally, this high‐density fermentation process was successfully scaled up in a 100‐L fermentor. The present work provides a powerful approach to produce this biopolymer as a bulk chemical in large scale.  相似文献   

15.
Anchorage‐dependent cell cultures are used for the production of viruses, viral vectors, and vaccines, as well as for various cell therapies and tissue engineering applications. Most of these applications currently rely on planar technologies for the generation of biological products. However, as new cell therapy product candidates move from clinical trials towards potential commercialization, planar platforms have proven to be inadequate to meet large‐scale manufacturing demand. Therefore, a new scalable platform for culturing anchorage‐dependent cells at high cell volumetric concentrations is urgently needed. One promising solution is to grow cells on microcarriers suspended in single‐use bioreactors. Toward this goal, a novel bioreactor system utilizing an innovative Vertical‐Wheel? technology was evaluated for its potential to support scalable cell culture process development. Two anchorage‐dependent human cell types were used: human lung carcinoma cells (A549 cell line) and human bone marrow‐derived mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC). Key hydrodynamic parameters such as power input, mixing time, Kolmogorov length scale, and shear stress were estimated. The performance of Vertical‐Wheel bioreactors (PBS‐VW) was then evaluated for A549 cell growth and oncolytic adenovirus type 5 production as well as for hMSC expansion. Regarding the first cell model, higher cell growth and number of infectious viruses per cell were achieved when compared with stirred tank (ST) bioreactors. For the hMSC model, although higher percentages of proliferative cells could be reached in the PBS‐VW compared with ST bioreactors, no significant differences in the cell volumetric concentration and expansion factor were observed. Noteworthy, the hMSC population generated in the PBS‐VW showed a significantly lower percentage of apoptotic cells as well as reduced levels of HLA‐DR positive cells. Overall, these results showed that process transfer from ST bioreactor to PBS‐VW, and scale‐up was successfully carried out for two different microcarrier‐based cell cultures. Ultimately, the data herein generated demonstrate the potential of Vertical‐Wheel bioreactors as a new scalable biomanufacturing platform for microcarrier‐based cell cultures of complex biopharmaceuticals. © 2015 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 31:1600–1612, 2015  相似文献   

16.
In industrial practice, stirred tank bioreactors are the most common mammalian cell culture platform. However, research and screening protocols at the laboratory scale (i.e., 5–100 mL) rely primarily on Petri dishes, culture bottles, or Erlenmeyer flasks. There is a clear need for simple—easy to assemble, easy to use, easy to clean—cell culture mini‐bioreactors for lab‐scale and/or screening applications. Here, we study the mixing performance and culture adequacy of a 30 mL eccentric stirred tank mini‐bioreactor. A detailed mixing characterization of the proposed bioreactor is presented. Laser induced fluorescence (LIF) experiments and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) computations are used to identify the operational conditions required for adequate mixing. Mammalian cell culture experiments were conducted with two different cell models. The specific growth rate and the maximum cell density of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell cultures grown in the mini‐bioreactor were comparable to those observed for 6‐well culture plates, Erlenmeyer flasks, and 1 L fully instrumented bioreactors. Human hematopoietic stem cells were successfully expanded tenfold in suspension conditions using the eccentric mini‐bioreactor system. Our results demonstrate good mixing performance and suggest the practicality and adequacy of the proposed mini‐bioreactor. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2013; 110: 1106–1118. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The number of therapeutic proteins produced by cell culture in the pharmaceutical industry continues to increase. During the early stages of manufacturing process development, hundreds of clones and various cell culture conditions are evaluated to develop a robust process to identify and select cell lines with high productivity. It is highly desirable to establish a high throughput system to accelerate process development and reduce cost. Multiwell plates and shake flasks are widely used in the industry as the scale down model for large‐scale bioreactors. However, one of the limitations of these two systems is the inability to measure and control pH in a high throughput manner. As pH is an important process parameter for cell culture, this could limit the applications of these scale down model vessels. An economical, rapid, and robust pH measurement method was developed at Eli Lilly and Company by employing SNARF‐4F 5‐(‐and 6)‐carboxylic acid. The method demonstrated the ability to measure the pH values of cell culture samples in a high throughput manner. Based upon the chemical equilibrium of CO2, HCO, and the buffer system, i.e., HEPES, we established a mathematical model to regulate pH in multiwell plates and shake flasks. The model calculates the required %CO2 from the incubator and the amount of sodium bicarbonate to be added to adjust pH to a preset value. The model was validated by experimental data, and pH was accurately regulated by this method. The feasibility of studying the pH effect on cell culture in 96‐well plates and shake flasks was also demonstrated in this study. This work shed light on mini‐bioreactor scale down model construction and paved the way for cell culture process development to improve productivity or product quality using high throughput systems. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2010  相似文献   

18.
Multi‐factorial experimentation is essential in understanding the link between mammalian cell culture conditions and the glycoprotein product of any biomanufacturing process. This understanding is increasingly demanded as bioprocess development is influenced by the Quality by Design paradigm. We have developed a system that allows hundreds of micro‐bioreactors to be run in parallel under controlled conditions, enabling factorial experiments of much larger scope than is possible with traditional systems. A high‐throughput analytics workflow was also developed using commercially available instruments to obtain product quality information for each cell culture condition. The micro‐bioreactor system was tested by executing a factorial experiment varying four process parameters: pH, dissolved oxygen, feed supplement rate, and reduced glutathione level. A total of 180 micro‐bioreactors were run for 2 weeks during this DOE experiment to assess this scaled down micro‐bioreactor system as a high‐throughput tool for process development. Online measurements of pH, dissolved oxygen, and optical density were complemented by offline measurements of glucose, viability, titer, and product quality. Model accuracy was assessed by regressing the micro‐bioreactor results with those obtained in conventional 3 L bioreactors. Excellent agreement was observed between the micro‐bioreactor and the bench‐top bioreactor. The micro‐bioreactor results were further analyzed to link parameter manipulations to process outcomes via leverage plots, and to examine the interactions between process parameters. The results show that feed supplement rate has a significant effect (P < 0.05) on all performance metrics with higher feed rates resulting in greater cell mass and product titer. Culture pH impacted terminal integrated viable cell concentration, titer and intact immunoglobulin G titer, with better results obtained at the lower pH set point. The results demonstrate that a micro‐scale system can be an excellent model of larger scale systems, while providing data sets broader and deeper than are available by traditional methods. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009; 104: 1107–1120. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

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20.
Demands for development of biological therapies is rapidly increasing, as is the drive to reduce time to patient. In order to speed up development, the disposable Automated Microscale Bioreactor (Ambr 250) system is increasingly gaining interest due to its advantages, including highly automated control, high throughput capacity, and short turnaround time. Traditional early stage upstream process development conducted in 2 ‐ 5 L bench‐top bioreactors requires high foot‐print, and running cost. The establishment of the Ambr 250 as a scale‐down model leads to many benefits in process development. In this study, a comprehensive characterization of mass transfer coefficient (kLa) in the Ambr 250 was conducted to define optimal operational conditions. Scale‐down approaches, including dimensionless volumetric flow rate (vvm), power per unit volume (P/V) and kLa have been evaluated using different cell lines. This study demonstrates that the Ambr 250 generated comparable profiles of cell growth and protein production, as seen at 5‐L and 1000‐L bioreactor scales, when using kLa as a scale‐down parameter. In addition to mimicking processes at large scales, the suitability of the Ambr 250 as a tool for clone selection, which is traditionally conducted in bench‐top bioreactors, was investigated. Data show that cell growth, productivity, metabolite profiles, and product qualities of material generated using the Ambr 250 were comparable to those from 5‐L bioreactors. Therefore, Ambr 250 can be used for clone selection and process development as a replacement for traditional bench‐top bioreactors minimizing resource utilization during the early stages of development in the biopharmaceutical industry. © 2017 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 33:478–489, 2017  相似文献   

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