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Increasing antibody yield and modulating final product quality using the Freedom TM CHO-S TM production platform

Michelle Sabourin,Ying Huang, Prasad Dhulipala, Shannon Beatty,Jian Liu, Peter Slade, Shawn Barrett, Shue-Yuan Wang,Karsten Winkler,Susanne Seitz,Thomas Rose,Volker Sandig, Peggy Lio, Steve Gorfien,Laurie Donahue-Hjelle, Graziella Piras

BMC proceedings(2011)

Cited 2|Views3
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Abstract
Background Cell line development (CLD) is a critical step in the generation of biotherapeutics, but it is still hindered by several pain points, including the lengthy and laborintensive workflow needed to isolate desirable clones, lack of reproducibility, as well as potential protein quality issues. Over the last decade, antibody titers in mammalian cell culture systems in excess of 3 g/L have been achieved through the use of novel media and feeds. However, it is still a challenge to consistently and rapidly create a stable cell line and a cell culture process capable of supporting both high antibody yield and acceptable post-translational modifications while managing the effort required for execution of the workflow. The goal of the study was to develop a robust and reproducible stable cell line workflow to generate scalable high-producing clones in less than 6 months, with industry-standard titers and desirable product quality using minimal effort. Using CHO-STM as the host cell line, we first evaluated if a single medium could be used for the entire CLD workflow, therefore avoiding the issues and complications of changing media during this process. We investigated if a formulation previously shown to increase titer as a production medium could in fact be used for all CLD steps, from transfection to stable pool isolation all the way through to clone productivity, without compromising titers or performance. The same rich production medium was used in limiting dilution cloning and compared to a lean cloning medium prototype. Furthermore, robustness of the workflow was verified by testing multiple molecules. We also explored reducing effort by streamlining all the steps of the workflow. Finally, we assessed top clone scalability and expressed product quality. We tested whether clones chosen only by titers responded well to scale-up and process development in a model bioreactor setting. In addition, product glycosylation from these clones was compared to the same molecule produced in CHO DG44 cells, a well-characterized production platform.
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Key words
Production Platform, Cell Culture Process, Productivity Assessment, Stable Pool, Royalty Payment
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