Literature DB >> 26560440

Chemically defined media modifications to lower tryptophan oxidation of biopharmaceuticals.

Laurie B Hazeltine1, Kristine M Knueven1, Yan Zhang1, Zhirui Lian1, Donald J Olson1, Anli Ouyang1.   

Abstract

Oxidation of biopharmaceuticals is a major product quality issue with potential impacts on activity and immunogenicity. At Eli Lilly and Company, high tryptophan oxidation was observed for two biopharmaceuticals in development produced in Chinese hamster ovary cells. A switch from historical hydrolysate-containing media to chemically defined media with a reformulated basal powder was thought to be responsible, so mitigation efforts focused on media modification. Shake flask studies identified that increasing tryptophan, copper, and manganese and decreasing cysteine concentrations were individual approaches to lower tryptophan oxidation. When amino acid and metal changes were combined, the modified formulation had a synergistic impact that led to substantially less tryptophan oxidation for both biopharmaceuticals. Similar results were achieved in shake flasks and benchtop bioreactors, demonstrating the potential to implement these modifications at manufacturing scale. The modified formulation did not negatively impact cell growth and viability, product titer, purity, charge variants, or glycan profile. A potential mechanism of action is presented for each amino acid or metal factor based on its role in oxidation chemistry. This work served not only to mitigate the tryptophan oxidation issue in two Lilly biopharmaceuticals in development, but also to increase our knowledge and appreciation for the impact of media components on product quality.
© 2015 American Institute of Chemical Engineers.

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Keywords:  Chinese hamster ovary; cell culture; chemically defined media; tryptophan oxidation

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26560440     DOI: 10.1002/btpr.2195

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


  1 in total

1.  Modulating cell culture oxidative stress reduces protein glycation and acidic charge variant formation.

Authors:  Stanley Chung; Jun Tian; Zhijun Tan; Jie Chen; Na Zhang; Yunping Huang; Erik Vandermark; Jongchan Lee; Michael Borys; Zheng Jian Li
Journal:  MAbs       Date:  2019-01-03       Impact factor: 5.857

  1 in total

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