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Differential gene expression of a feed-spiked super-producing CHO cell line
- Source :
- Journal of biotechnology. 285
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- Feed supplements are concentrated cell culture media that contain a variety of nutrients, which can be added during a bioprocess. During fed-batch cultivation, feed media are typically added to a growing cell culture to maximize cell and product concentrations. In this study, only a single shot of feed medium was added on day 0 to a basal cell culture medium and compared to non-supplemented basal medium (feed-spiked at day 0 versus control experiments) by cultivation of a recombinant mAb expressing CHO cell line in batch mode under controlled conditions in a bioreactor. Since the feed-spike at day 0 was based on existing medium components without introducing additional supplements, a desirable process with decreased complexity was generated. Unlike cells in basal medium, feed-spiked cultures reached almost 2× higher peak cell concentrations (10 × 106 c/mL vs. 18 × 106 c/mL) and 3× higher antibody concentrations (0.8 g/L vs. 2.4 g/L). Batch process time and the integral over the viable cell count were similar for both process types. Constantly high cell-specific production rates in feed-spiked cultures (70 pg/cell/day) compared to continuously declining rates in basal medium (from 70 to 10 pg/cell/day) were responsible for an overall 70% higher cell-specific production rate and the higher product concentrations. To associate gene expression patterns to different process proceedings, transcriptome analysis was performed using microarrays. Several transcripts that are involved with glutamine de novo synthesis and citric acid cycle were significantly upregulated on several days in feed-spiked cultures. The top identified gene ontology (GO) terms related well to cell cycle and primary metabolism, cellular division as well as nucleobase formation or regulation, which indicated a more active proliferative state for feed-spiked cultures. KEGG biochemical pathway analysis and Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) further confirmed these findings from a complementary perspective. Moreover, several interesting gene targets, which have not yet been associated with recombinant protein expression, were identified that related to a higher proliferative state, growth, protein synthesis, cell-size control, metabolism, cell survival as well as genes that are associated with the control of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) in feed-spiked cultures. Analysis of critical product quality attributes (i.e. glycosylation, charge variants and size distribution) showed that feed-spiking did not change antibody quality.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine
Cell division
Cell
Cell Culture Techniques
Gene Expression
Bioengineering
CHO Cells
01 natural sciences
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
03 medical and health sciences
Bioreactors
Cricetulus
010608 biotechnology
Gene expression
medicine
Animals
Chemistry
Chinese hamster ovary cell
Antibodies, Monoclonal
General Medicine
Metabolism
Cell cycle
Recombinant Proteins
Culture Media
Metabolic pathway
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Biochemistry
Cell culture
Biotechnology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18734863
- Volume :
- 285
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of biotechnology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....3febfa7b00cf46b7d1fe8a974676e5cc