4.6 Article

Hyperthermic shift and cell engineering increase small extracellular vesicle production in HEK293F cells

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.28612

Keywords

bioprocessing; biotechnology; cell line engineering; extracellular vesicles; proteomics; transcriptomics

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Researchers identified beneficial bioprocess conditions for small extracellular vesicle (sEV) production and found that short-term hyperthermia significantly increased the yield and quality of sEVs. Transcriptomics and proteomics analyses revealed an upregulation of heat-shock response and molecules related to exosome biogenesis and vesicle trafficking, which may contribute to the increased productivity. Overexpression of six genes was also found to enhance sEV secretion and production.
Although small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) have promising features as an emerging therapeutic format for a broad spectrum of applications, for example, blood-brain-barrier permeability, low immunogenicity, and targeted delivery, economic manufacturability will be a crucial factor for the therapeutic applicability of sEVs. In the past, bioprocess optimization and cell line engineering improved titers of classical biologics multifold. We therefore performed a design of experiments (DoE) screening to identify beneficial bioprocess conditions for sEV production in HEK293F suspension cells. Short-term hyperthermia at 40degree celsius elevated volumetric productivity 5.4-fold while sEVs displayed improved exosomal characteristics and cells retained >90% viability. Investigating the effects of hyperthermia via transcriptomics and proteomics analyses, an expectable, cellular heat-shock response was found together with an upregulation of many exosome biogenesis and vesicle trafficking related molecules, which could cause the productivity boost in tandem with heat shock proteins (HSPs), like HSP90 and HSC70. Because of these findings, a selection of 44 genes associated with exosome biogenesis, vesicle secretion machinery, or heat-shock response was screened for their influence on sEV production. Overexpression of six genes, CHMP1A, CHMP3, CHMP5, VPS28, CD82, and EZR, significantly increased both sEV secretion and titer, making them suitable targets for cell line engineering.

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