very useful as quality control of the medium or to verify consistency between lots.
Moreover, determination of cell size/cell volume via cell counter or capacitance
probes should consider that cells do not only change in diameter due to osmolality,
but also due to cell cycle phase, metabolic state or cell lysis (virus production).
5.5.2
MONITORING CELL METABOLISM
In process development, cell growth and metabolism needs to be captured closely. High
cell concentrations can only be achieved, when nutrient supply is ample and neither
metabolites nor other toxic by-products are approaching inhibiting levels. Furthermore,
the pH of the medium should be controlled in a range of pH 7.0−7.6, and oxygen supply
should exceed 40% pO2. Moreover, agitation speed and stirrer type affects cell growth.
In small-scale cultivations offline measurement of the most important metabolites
(glucose, glutamine, lactate, ammonia), pH, and cell concentration is often enough to
optimize cell growth. When envisioning large-scale cultivation or cultivation at very
high cell concentrations, the concentration of amino acids or other media compounds
may also be monitored. In Figure 5.3, main metabolite concentrations of a typical batch
cultivation are given together with typical stoichiometric ratios.
TABLE 5.5
Non-animal substitutes of media components
Constituent
Animal source
Non-animal source
Insulin
Bovine/porcine pancreas
Bovine or human rec. from
E. coli or yeast
Transferrin
Bovine, porcine, or human plasma
fraction
Inorganic iron carriers/chelates
Serum protein fractions
(e.g., albumin, fetuin,
lipoproteins)
Bovine or animal serum
Lipid-delivery alternativesPlant-
derived hydrolysates
Protein hydrolysates
Lactalbumin, peptone, casein
Plant-derived hydrolysates
Lipids/sterols
Ovine/human cholesterol;piscine
lipids, porcine liver
Plant-derived sterols;Synthetic
and plant-derived fatty acids
Growth and attachment
factors
Murine/bovine organ digests
Rec. factorsCollagen precursors
Amino acids (e.g., tyrosine,
cyst(e)ine, hydroxyproline)
Human hair; avian feathers, bovine
collagen; bovine/porcine bone
gelatin
Synthetic (fermentation) or
plant-derived amino acids
Surfactants (e.g.,
Tween™ 80)
Bovine tallow
Plant-derived polysorbate
Dissociating enzymes
(e.g., trypsin)
Porcine pancreas
Plant-derived
enzymesMicrobial enzymes
Albumin
Bovine
Rec. from bacteria and yeast
Table from [ 33].
100
Bioprocessing of Viral Vaccines