Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Tissue Engineering Animal cells • • • • • • • 10-30 μm diameter spherical, ellipsoidal no cell wall fragile plasma membrane shear sensitive generally negatively charged hybridomas are nonanchorage dependent Guts • • • • • • endoplasmic reticulum (protein synthesis) mitochondria (respiration) lysosomes (digestion) Golgi body (secretion) nucleus (chromosomal DNA) cytoskeleton (strength, shape, response) Typical medium • glucose (C source) • glucosamine (C source – ammonia and glutamate... other amino acids) • amino acids • horse or calf, fetal bovine serum (5-20%) • growth factors, vitamins • mineral salts, buffer • Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DME) Cultivation method • tissues excised aseptically from lung, kidney (~2 mm3) • agitated in trypsin (~0.25%), buffered saline for 2h at 37oC • cell suspension filtered and centrifuged to wash cells • primary culture formed in T-flasks or roller bottles • medium contains serum, antibiotics • normally form monolayers on surface (anchorage dependent) • trypsin (protease) separates tissue into single cell culture (suspension culture) Cultivation • secondary culture established from primary culture • cells removed from flask surface using EDTA, trypsin, collagenase or pronase • 5-30 min at 37oC • serum added and suspension centrifuged, washed with buffered saline • many secondary cultures are suspension culture (nonanchorage dependent) Mortal versus immortal • most differentiated mammalian cell lines are mortal • divide for only limited number of generations (eg. 30 generations) • human fibroblasts (WI-38 or MRC-5) • immortal cells are “continuous” or “transformed” • cancer cells are immortal/transformed naturally • reluctant to approve products from transformed (cancer) cells • often become attachment independent • cultured indefinitely in suspension culture • early 90’s, started approval of therapeutic proteins, tissue plasminogen activator from immortalized cells Mortal (normal) Transformed • anchorage dependent (except blood cells) • finite number of divisions • monolayer culture • dependent on growth factor signals for growth • better retention of differentiated cell function • typical cell surface receptors • nonanchorage dependent (suspension culture) • immortal • multilayer cultures • growth factors may not be needed • loss of differentiation • cell surface receptors may be altered Other considerations • insect cells are naturally continuous • senescence observed in many fish cell lines Serum based media • • • • serum costs $100-$500/L complicates purification (serum proteins) filter sterilized potential for virus, mycoplasma contamination common • potential contamination by prions • prone to foaming • inherent variability and instability Serum-free alternative • • • • • reduced cost simplifies product purification improved reproducibility reduced contamination not all cell lines have adapted Examples • Eagle’s minimal essential medium (MEM-FBS) • MCDB 170MDS (serum free – see Sigma catalogue) Mammalian cell growth • pH ~ 7.3, T = 37OC • td ~ 10 - 50h (20h typical) • 5% CO2 enriched air (buffers pH) • HCO32-/H2CO3- controls pH at 7.3 • HEPES (N-[2hydroxyethel]piperazine-N’-[2ethanesulfonic acid]) buffer CHO cells Other cell lines • insect cells grow at 28oC and pH 6.2 • fish cells at 25 to 35oC, pH 7 – 7.5 Kinetics • • • • short lag rapid drop in viable cells peak 3 – 5 days MAb production continues • most products mixed growth associated from Reuveay et al., J. Immunol. Meth. 86: 53-59, 1986) MAb kinetics • Luedeking-Piret eqn. 1 dp q p X dt O2 requirements • 0.06 to 0.2 x 10-12 mol O2/h/cell • 5 times less than plant cells and much lower than for microbial cells • suspension culture: 0.1-1 g/L (5 x 105 – 5 x 106 cells/mL • 10 times higher for immobilized cells • kLa values necessary 5 - 25 h-1 (106 cells/mL) • cells are shear sensitive Bioreactor design considerations • • • • large cells slow growing shear sensitive anchorage dependent or suspension culture • product titer low (μg/mL) • ammonium, lactate toxic metabolites Design approach • • • • • gently agitated and aerated T, pH, O2, redox homogeneous CO2 enriched air microcarriers (large surface) toxic product removal Lab scale • T-flasks (25-100 mL) • spinner flasks (100 mL – 1L) with paddletype magnetic agitators • roller bottles (50 mL – 5L), 1-5 rpm • shallow trays • incubator, 5% CO2, 37oC Industrial scale • anchorage dependent cells – – – – microcarriers hollow fiber reactors ceramic matrix porous beads • suspension culture – stirred reactors – airlift or bubble column Perfusion reactors • • • • membrane reactor microencapsulation cells retained product and toxic metabolites removed Roller bottles • not practical for large scale (few exceptions) • liquid covers 25% of bottle surface • 1-5 rpm • 75% time, cells exposed to 5% CO2 • commercial erythropoietin and vaccine production Microcarriers • DEAE-Sephadex or DEAEpolyacrylamide • high surface area (70,000 cm2/L) • high cell density (107 cells/mL) • also dextran, hollow glass • surface collagen coat promotes cell adhesion • mono- or multilayer cell growth • macroporous carriers increase SA and protect cells, but diffusion problems