Back to Search Start Over

Optimization of non-detergent treatment for enveloped virus inactivation using the Taguchi design of experimental methodology (DOE)

Authors :
Maryam Khatami
Seyed Nezamedin Hosseini
Hooman Kaghazian
Seyed Dawood Mousavi Nasab
Roya Khosravi
Amin Javidanbardan
Source :
Preparative biochemistrybiotechnology. 49(7)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

In mammalian cell culture technology, viral contamination is one of the main challenges; and, so far, various strategies have been taken to remove or inactivate viruses in the cell-line production process. The suitability and feasibility of each method are determined by different factors including effectiveness in target virus inactivation, maintaining recombinant protein stability, easiness-in terms of the process condition, cost-effectiveness, and eco-friendliness. In this research, Taguchi design-of-experiments (DOE) methodology was used to optimize a non-detergent viral inactivation method via considering four factors of temperature, time, pH, and alcohol concentration in an unbiased (orthogonal) fashion with low influence of nuisance factors. Herpes Simplex Virus-1 (HSV1) and Vero cell-line were used as models for enveloped viruses and cell-line, respectively. Examining the cytopathic effects (CPE) in different dilutions showed that pH (4), alcohol (15%), time (120 min), and temperature (25 °C) were the optimal points for viral inactivation. Evaluating the significance of each parameter in the HSV-1 inactivation using Taguchi and ANOVA analyses, the contributions of pH, alcohol, temperature and time were 56.5%, 19.2%, 12%, and 12%, respectively. Examining the impact of the optimal viral treatment condition on the stability of model recombinant protein-recombinant human erythropoietin, no destabilization was detected.

Details

ISSN :
15322297
Volume :
49
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Preparative biochemistrybiotechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....78e8946b442409ae36811a4e544e78e5