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Impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on CHO cell bioreactor cultures

Mycoplasma contamination events in biomanufacturing facilities can result in loss of production and costly cleanups. Mycoplasma may survive in mammalian cell cultures with only subtle changes to the culture and may penetrate the 0.2 µm filters often used in the primary clarification of harvested cel...

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Autores principales: Fratz‐Berilla, Erica J., Faison, Talia, Kohnhorst, Casey L., Velugula‐Yellela, Sai Rashmika, Powers, David N., Brorson, Kurt, Agarabi, Cyrus
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6900124/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31478189
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bit.27161
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author Fratz‐Berilla, Erica J.
Faison, Talia
Kohnhorst, Casey L.
Velugula‐Yellela, Sai Rashmika
Powers, David N.
Brorson, Kurt
Agarabi, Cyrus
author_facet Fratz‐Berilla, Erica J.
Faison, Talia
Kohnhorst, Casey L.
Velugula‐Yellela, Sai Rashmika
Powers, David N.
Brorson, Kurt
Agarabi, Cyrus
author_sort Fratz‐Berilla, Erica J.
collection PubMed
description Mycoplasma contamination events in biomanufacturing facilities can result in loss of production and costly cleanups. Mycoplasma may survive in mammalian cell cultures with only subtle changes to the culture and may penetrate the 0.2 µm filters often used in the primary clarification of harvested cell culture fluid. Culture cell‐based and indicator cell‐based assays that are used to detect mycoplasma are highly sensitive but can take up to 28 days to complete and cannot be used for real‐time decision making during the biomanufacturing process. To support real‐time measurements of mycoplasma contamination, there is a push to explore nucleic acid testing. However, cell‐based methods measure growth or colony forming units and nucleic acid testing measures genome copy number; this has led to ambiguity regarding how to compare the sensitivity of the methods. In addition, the high risk of conducting experiments wherein one deliberately spikes mycoplasma into bioreactors has dissuaded commercial groups from performing studies to explore the multiple variables associated with the upstream effects of a mycoplasma contamination in a manufacturing setting. Here we studied the ability of Mycoplasma arginini to persist in a single‐use, perfusion rocking bioreactor system containing a Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) DG44 cell line expressing a model monoclonal immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) antibody. We examined M. arginini growth and detection by culture methods, as well as the effects of M. arginini on mammalian cell health, metabolism, and productivity. We compared process parameters and controls normally measured in bioreactors including dissolved oxygen, gas mix, and base addition to maintain pH, to examine parameter changes as potential indicators of contamination. Our work showed that M. arginini affects CHO cell growth profile, viability, nutrient consumption, oxygen use, and waste production at varying timepoints after M. arginini introduction to the culture. Importantly, how the M. arginini contamination impacts the CHO cells is influenced by the concentration of CHO cells and rate of perfusion at the time of M. arginini spike. Careful evaluation of dissolved oxygen, pH control parameters, ammonia, and arginine over time may be used to indicate mycoplasma contamination in CHO cell cultures in a bioreactor before a read‐out from a traditional method.
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spelling pubmed-69001242019-12-20 Impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on CHO cell bioreactor cultures Fratz‐Berilla, Erica J. Faison, Talia Kohnhorst, Casey L. Velugula‐Yellela, Sai Rashmika Powers, David N. Brorson, Kurt Agarabi, Cyrus Biotechnol Bioeng ARTICLES Mycoplasma contamination events in biomanufacturing facilities can result in loss of production and costly cleanups. Mycoplasma may survive in mammalian cell cultures with only subtle changes to the culture and may penetrate the 0.2 µm filters often used in the primary clarification of harvested cell culture fluid. Culture cell‐based and indicator cell‐based assays that are used to detect mycoplasma are highly sensitive but can take up to 28 days to complete and cannot be used for real‐time decision making during the biomanufacturing process. To support real‐time measurements of mycoplasma contamination, there is a push to explore nucleic acid testing. However, cell‐based methods measure growth or colony forming units and nucleic acid testing measures genome copy number; this has led to ambiguity regarding how to compare the sensitivity of the methods. In addition, the high risk of conducting experiments wherein one deliberately spikes mycoplasma into bioreactors has dissuaded commercial groups from performing studies to explore the multiple variables associated with the upstream effects of a mycoplasma contamination in a manufacturing setting. Here we studied the ability of Mycoplasma arginini to persist in a single‐use, perfusion rocking bioreactor system containing a Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) DG44 cell line expressing a model monoclonal immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) antibody. We examined M. arginini growth and detection by culture methods, as well as the effects of M. arginini on mammalian cell health, metabolism, and productivity. We compared process parameters and controls normally measured in bioreactors including dissolved oxygen, gas mix, and base addition to maintain pH, to examine parameter changes as potential indicators of contamination. Our work showed that M. arginini affects CHO cell growth profile, viability, nutrient consumption, oxygen use, and waste production at varying timepoints after M. arginini introduction to the culture. Importantly, how the M. arginini contamination impacts the CHO cells is influenced by the concentration of CHO cells and rate of perfusion at the time of M. arginini spike. Careful evaluation of dissolved oxygen, pH control parameters, ammonia, and arginine over time may be used to indicate mycoplasma contamination in CHO cell cultures in a bioreactor before a read‐out from a traditional method. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-09-11 2019-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6900124/ /pubmed/31478189 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bit.27161 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Biotechnology and Bioengineering Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle ARTICLES
Fratz‐Berilla, Erica J.
Faison, Talia
Kohnhorst, Casey L.
Velugula‐Yellela, Sai Rashmika
Powers, David N.
Brorson, Kurt
Agarabi, Cyrus
Impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on CHO cell bioreactor cultures
title Impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on CHO cell bioreactor cultures
title_full Impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on CHO cell bioreactor cultures
title_fullStr Impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on CHO cell bioreactor cultures
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on CHO cell bioreactor cultures
title_short Impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on CHO cell bioreactor cultures
title_sort impacts of intentional mycoplasma contamination on cho cell bioreactor cultures
topic ARTICLES
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6900124/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31478189
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bit.27161
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