4.5 Article

Scale-up of virus-like particles production: effects of sparging, agitation and bioreactor scale on cell growth, infection kinetics and productivity

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 1, Pages 55-64

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2003.09.012

Keywords

baculovirus; insect cells; virus-like particles; bioreactor; sparging; scale-up

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The baculovirus-insect cells expression system was used for the production of self-forming Porcine parvovirus (PPV) like particles (virus-like particles, VLPs) in serum-free medium. At 21 bioreactor scale an efficient production was achieved by infecting the culture at a concentration of 1.5 x 10(6) cells/ml using a low multiplicity of infection of 0.05 pfu per cell. In a continuous bioreactor, it was shown that the uninfected insect cells were not sensitive to local shear stress values up to 2.25 N/m(2) at high Reynolds numbers (1.5 x 10(4)) in sparging conditions. Uninfected insect cells can be grown at scaled-up bioreactor at high agitation and sparging rates as long as vortex formation is avoided and bubble entrapment is minimized. An efficient process scale-up to 25 1 bioreactor was made using constant shear stress criteria for scale-up. The kinetics of baculovirus infection at low multiplicity of infection, either at different cell concentration or at different scales, are very reproducible, despite the different turbulence conditions present in the bioreactor milieu. The results suggest that the infection kinetics is controlled by the rate of baculovirus-cell receptor attachment and is independent of the bioreactor hydrodynamic conditions. Furthermore, the achieved specific and volumetric productivities were higher at the 251 scale when compared to the smaller scale bioreactor. Different rates of cell lysis after infection were observed and seem to fully explain both the shift in optimal harvest time and the increase in cell specific productivity. The results emphasize the importance of integrated strategies and engineering concepts in process development at bioreactor stage with the baculovirus insect cell system. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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