Literature DB >> 12573026

PH, pCO2, and temperature effect on R-adenovirus production.

Mario Jardon1, Alain Garnier.   

Abstract

The effects of pH, carbon dioxide vapor pressure, pCO(2), and temperature on E1 and E3 deleted recombinant adenovirus vector (rAV) production with HEK293S cells have been studied in the ranges of pH = 6.7-7.7, pCO(2) = 0.05-0.20 atm, and T = 32-39 degrees C, respectively. The experiments were performed in four 500-mL bioreactors in parallel, which make possible the reduction of inter-run variability. Cell concentration and viability, relative oxygen uptake rate (OUR), fluorescence, and viral titer were measured. It was found that, although pH and pCO(2) did not affect significantly cell viability in the range studied, they had an important effect on virus titer. pCO(2) allowed the maximum production of rAV at 0.05 atm, and pH showed a very sharp optimum at 7.2. Temperature had an effect on both cell metabolism and virus titer. Low temperature prolonged cell viability and high OUR. Most of all, a 3-fold increase in virus yield was found at 35 degrees C compared to that at 37 degrees C, while 32 degrees C was not as beneficial (1.5-fold increase). This finding could have an important impact on large-scale production. This phenomenon was modeled using a simple 3-parameter synthesis-decay model. This model shows how the optimum gain in virus production at 35 degrees C is due to a balance between the production and decay processes at that temperature.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12573026     DOI: 10.1021/bp025585a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biotechnol Prog        ISSN: 1520-6033


  8 in total

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  8 in total

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