Culture redox potential (CRP) and oxygen uptake rate (OUR) were monitored on-line during glucoseand glutamine-limited batch cultures of a murine hybridoma cell line that secretes a neutralizing monoclonal antibody specific to toxin 2 of the scorpion Centruroides noxius Hoffmann. It was found that OUR and CRP can be used for assessing the viable cell concentration and growth phases of the culture. Before nutrient depletion, OUR increased exponentially with viable cell concentration, whereas CRP decreased monotonically until cell viability started to decrease. During the death phase, CRP gradually increased. A sudden decrease in OUR occurred upon glucose or glutamine depletion. CRP traced the dissolved oxygen profile during a control action or an operational eventuality, however, during nutrient depletion it did not follow the expected behavior of a system composed mainly by the O 2 /H 2 O redox couple. Such a behavior was not due to the accumulated lactate or ammonia, nor to possible intracellular redox potential changes caused by nutrient depletion, as inferred from respiration inhibition by rotenone or uncoupled respiration by 2,4-dinitrophenol. As shown in this study, operational eventualities can be erroneously interpreted as changes in OUR when using algorithms based solely on oxygen balances. However, simultaneous measurements of CRP and OUR may be used to discriminate real metabolic events from operational failures. The results presented here can be used in advanced real-time algorithms for controling glucose and glutamine at low concentrations, avoiding under-or over-feeding them in hybridoma cultures, and consequently reducing the accumulation of metabolic wastes and improving monoclonal antibody production.
Exponentially fed-batch cultures (EFBC) of a murine hybridoma in T-flasks were explored as a simple alternative experimental tool to chemostats for the study of metabolism, growth and monoclonal antibody (MAb) production kinetics. EFBC were operated in the variable volume mode using an exponentially increasing and predetermined stepwise feeding profile of fresh complete medium. The dynamic and steady-state behaviors of the EFBC coincided with those reported for chemostats at dilution rates below the maximum growth rate. In particular, steady-state for growth rate and concentration of viable cells, glucose, and lactate was attained at different dilution rates between 0.005 and 0.05 h-1. For such a range, the glucose and lactate metabolic quotients and the steady-state glucose concentration increased, whereas total MAb, volumetric, and specific MAb production rates decreased 65-, 6-, and 3-fold, respectively, with increasing dilution rates. The lactate from glucose yield remained relatively constant for dilution rates up to 0.03 h-1, where it started to decrease. In contrast, viability remained above 80% at high dilution rates but rapidly decreased at dilution rates below 0.02 h-1. No true washout occurred during operation above the maximum growth, as concluded from the constant viable cell number. However, growth rate decreased to as low as 0.01 h-1, suggesting the requirement of a minimum cell density, and concomitant autocrine growth factors, for growth. Chemostat operation drawbacks were avoided by EFBC in T-flasks. Namely, simple and stable operation was obtained at dilution rates ranging from very low to above the maximum growth rate. Furthermore, simultaneous operation of multiple experiments in reduced size was possible, minimizing start-up time, media and equipment costs.
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