Effects of Elevated pCO2 and Osmolality on Growth of CHO Cells and Production of Antibody‐Fusion Protein B1: A Case Study

Partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) and osmolality as high as 150 mmHg and 440 mOsm/kg, respectively, were observed in large‐scale CHO cell culture producing an antibody‐fusion protein, B1. pCO2 and osmolality, when elevated to high levels in bioreactors, can adversely affect cell culture and recombinant protein production. To understand the sole impact of pCO2 or osmolality on CHO cell growth, experiments were performed in bench‐scale bioreactors allowing one variable to change while controlling the other. Elevating pCO2 from 50 to 150 mmHg under controlled osmolality (about 350 mOsm/kg) resulted in a 9% reduction in specific cell growth rate. In contrast, increasing osmolality resulted in a linear reduction in specific cell growth rate (0.008 h−1/100 mOsm/kg) and led to a 60% decrease at 450 mOsm/kg as compared to the control at 316 mOsm/kg. This osmolality shift from 316 to 445 mOsm/kg resulted in an increase in specific production rates of lactate and ammonia by 43% and 48%, respectively. To elucidate the effect of high osmolality and/or pCO2 on the production phase, experiments were conducted in bench‐scale bioreactors to more closely reflect the pCO2 and osmolality levels observed at large scale. Increasing osmolality to 400–450 mOsm/kg did not result in an obvious change in viable cell density and product titer. However, a further increase in osmolality to 460–500 mOsm/kg led to a 5% reduction in viable cell density and a 8% decrease in cell viability as compared to the control. Final titer was not affected as a result of an apparent increase in specific production rate under this increased osmolality. Furthermore, the combined effects from high pCO2 (140–160 mmHg) and osmolality (400–450 mOsm/kg) caused a 20% drop in viable cell density, a more prominent decrease as compared to elevated osmolality alone. Results obtained here illustrate the sole effect of high pCO2 (or osmolality) on CHO cell growth and demonstrate a distinct impact of high osmolality and/or pCO2 on production phase as compared to that on growth phase. These results are useful to understand the response of the CHO cells to elevated pCO2 (and/or osmolality) at a different stage of cultivation in bioreactors and thus are valuable in guiding bioreactor optimization toward improving protein production.

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