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Development of a small‐scale rotary lobe‐pump cell culture model for examining cell damage in large‐scale N‐1 seed perfusion process
Author(s) -
Johnstone Patrick,
Mast Elena,
Hughes Erik,
Peng Haofan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
biotechnology progress
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.572
H-Index - 129
eISSN - 1520-6033
pISSN - 8756-7938
DOI - 10.1002/btpr.3044
Subject(s) - shearing (physics) , materials science , robustness (evolution) , shear (geology) , biomedical engineering , composite material , chemistry , engineering , biochemistry , gene
Perfusion technology has been identified as a process improvement capable of eliminating some of the constraints in cell culture and allows for high cell densities and viabilities. However, when implementing this N‐1 seed perfusion platform in large‐scale manufacturing, unexpected cell damage was observed as early as Day 1. Given that the shear rate within recirculation hollow fibers was normalized and aligned correctly across bench, pilot, and manufacture scale, the primary mitigation was placed on the rotary lobe pump. Lowering the pump rate in manufacture scale successfully alleviated the cell damage. To understand the source of cell damage within the pump, a small‐scale rotary lobe‐pump robustness model was developed. Testing different pump flow rates and back pressures, it was concluded that high back pressure can cause cell damage. The back pressure within the system can cause back flow and high shear within small clearances inside the pump, which lead to the primary cell damage observed at a large scale. This shear level can be significantly higher than the shear in the hollow fiber. This pump robustness model can be utilized to aid the perfusion skid design, including pump operation efficiency and cell shear sensitivity. Methods to reduce the back pressure and cell shearing were determined to better predict manufacturing performance in the future.