Literature DB >> 28571695

Influenza viruses production: Evaluation of a novel avian cell line DuckCelt®-T17.

Emma Petiot1, Anaïs Proust2, Aurélien Traversier2, Laurent Durous2, Frédéric Dappozze3, Marianne Gras4, Chantal Guillard3, Jean-Marc Balloul4, Manuel Rosa-Calatrava5.   

Abstract

The influenza vaccine manufacturing industry is looking for production cell lines that are easily scalable, highly permissive to multiple viruses, and more effective in term of viral productivity. One critical characteristic of such cell lines is their ability to grow in suspension, in serum free conditions and at high cell densities. Influenza virus causing severe epidemics both in human and animals is an important threat to world healthcare. The repetitive apparition of influenza pandemic outbreaks in the last 20years explains that manufacturing sector is still looking for more effective production processes to replace/supplement embryonated egg-based process. Cell-based production strategy, with a focus on avian cell lines, is one of the promising solutions. Three avian cell lines, namely duck EB66®cells (Valneva), duck AGE.CR® cells (Probiogen) and quail QOR/2E11 cells (Baxter), are now competing with traditional mammalian cell platforms (Vero and MDCK cells) used for influenza vaccine productions and are currently at advance stage of commercial development for the manufacture of influenza vaccines. The DuckCelt®-T17 cell line presented in this work is a novel avian cell line developed by Transgene. This cell line was generated from primary embryo duck cells with the constitutive expression of the duck telomerase reverse transcriptase (dTERT). The DuckCelt®-T17 cells were able to grow in batch suspension cultures and serum-free conditions up to 6.5×106cell/ml and were easily scaled from 10ml up to 3l bioreactor. In the present study, DuckCelt®-T17 cell line was tested for its abilities to produce various human, avian and porcine influenza strains. Most of the viral strains were produced at significant infectious titers (>5.8 log TCID50/ml) with optimization of the infection conditions. Human strains H1N1 and H3N2, as well as all the avian strains tested (H5N2, H7N1, H3N8, H11N9, H12N5) were the most efficiently produced with highest titre reached of 9.05 log TCID50/ml for A/Panama/2007/99 influenza H3N2. Porcine strains were also greatly rescued with titres from 4 to 7 log TCID50/ml depending of the subtypes. Interestingly, viral kinetics showed maximal titers reached at 24h post-infection for most of the strains, allowing early harvest time (Time Of Harvest: TOH). The B strains present specific production kinetics with a delay of 24h before reaching the maximal viral particle release. Process optimization on H1N1 2009 human pandemic strain allowed identifying best operating conditions for production (MOI, trypsin concentration, cell density at infection) allowing improving the production level by 2 log. Our results suggest that the DuckCelt®-T17 cell line is a very promising platform for industrial production of influenza viruses and particularly for avian viral strains.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Avian cell line; Influenza vaccine; Influenza virus strains; Production process optimization

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28571695     DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.03.102

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vaccine        ISSN: 0264-410X            Impact factor:   3.641


  6 in total

1.  Development of an efficient veterinary rabies vaccine production process in the avian suspension cell line AGE1.CR.pIX.

Authors:  Khaled Trabelsi; Meriem Ben Zakour; Ingo Jordan; Volker Sandig; Samia Rourou; Hela Kallel
Journal:  BMC Biotechnol       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 3.329

2.  The superior role of coagulation factor FX over FVII in adenoviral-mediated innate immune induction of the hepatocyte: an in vitro experiment.

Authors:  Saeed Firoozi Ghahestani; Alireza Shiri; Afagh Moattari; Jamal Sarvari; Ali Moahammad Tamaddon; Seyed Younes Hossein
Journal:  Clin Exp Hepatol       Date:  2020-09-30

3.  Cell-based influenza vaccine: current production, halal status assessment, and recommendations towards Islamic-compliant manufacturing.

Authors:  Nurul Nadiah Zulkarnain; Nurina Anuar; Norliza Abd Rahman; Siti Rozaimah Sheikh Abdullah; Muhammad Nazir Alias; Mashitoh Yaacob; Zhongren Ma; Gongtao Ding
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2021-02-04       Impact factor: 3.452

4.  Antiviral Activity Against Infectious Bronchitis Virus and Bioactive Components of Hypericum perforatum L.

Authors:  Huijie Chen; Ishfaq Muhammad; Yue Zhang; Yudong Ren; Ruili Zhang; Xiaodan Huang; Lei Diao; Haixin Liu; Xunliang Li; Xiaoqi Sun; Ghulam Abbas; Guangxing Li
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2019-10-29       Impact factor: 5.810

5.  Establishment of a genetically engineered chicken DF-1 cell line for efficient amplification of influenza viruses in the absence of trypsin.

Authors:  Kelly Chungu; Young Hyun Park; Seung Je Woo; Su Bin Lee; Deivendran Rengaraj; Hong Jo Lee; Jae Yong Han
Journal:  BMC Biotechnol       Date:  2021-01-07       Impact factor: 2.563

6.  IRF7-deficient MDCK cell based on CRISPR/Cas9 technology for enhancing influenza virus replication and improving vaccine production.

Authors:  Oraphan Mayuramart; Witthaya Poomipak; Somruthai Rattanaburi; Kritsada Khongnomnan; Songtham Anuntakarun; Suthat Saengchoowong; Tanit Chavalit; Naphat Chantaravisoot; Sunchai Payungporn
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2022-09-21       Impact factor: 3.061

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.