| Literature DB >> 28054475 |
Niklas Andersson1, Anton Löfgren1, Marianne Olofsson1, Anton Sellberg1, Bernt Nilsson1, Peter Tiainen2.
Abstract
To increase the productivity in biopharmaceutical production, a natural step is to introduce integrated continuous biomanufacturing which leads to fewer buffer and storage tanks, smaller sizes of integrated unit operations, and full automation of the operation. The main contribution of this work is to illustrate a methodology for design and control of a downstream process based on integrated column sequences. For small scale production, for example, pre-clinical studies, integrated column sequences can be implemented on a single chromatography system. This makes for a very efficient drug development platform. The proposed methodology is composed of four steps and is governed by a set of tools, that is presented, that makes the transition from batch separations to a complete integrated separation sequence as easy as possible. This methodology, its associated tools and the physical implementation is presented and illustrated on a case study where the target protein is separated from impurities through an integrated four column sequence. This article shows that the design and control of an integrated column sequence was successfully implemented for a tertiary protein separation problem.Keywords: autonomous downstream processing; continuous bioprocessing; integrated column sequences; multiple column control; straight through processing
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28054475 DOI: 10.1002/btpr.2434
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Prog ISSN: 1520-6033