The murine B-lymphocyte hybridoma, CC9C10 was grown at steady state under serum-free conditions in continuous culture at dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations in the range of 10% to 150% of air saturation. Cells could be maintained within this range at high viability in a steady state at a dilution r
Effects of dissolved oxygen concentration on hybridoma growth and metabolism in continuous culture
✍ Scribed by William M. Miller; Charles R. Wilke; Harvey W. Blanch
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 725 KB
- Volume
- 132
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Oxygen transport is a major limitation in large-scale mammalian cell culture. The effects of the dissolved oxygen concentration (DO; from 0.1 to 100% saturation with air) on Sp2/0-derived mouse hybridomas were investigated using continuous culture. The steady-state concentration of viable cells increased with decreasing DO until a critical dissolved oxygen concentration of 0.5% of air saturation was reached. The cell concentration declined at lower DO because of incomplete glutamine oxidation, and the specific lactate production from glucose increased to offset the reduced energy production from glutamine. Cell viability increased as the DO was decreased; the viability continued to increase even when the DO was reduced below 0.5%. The specific oxygen uptake rate was essentially constant for DO greater than or equal to 10% of air saturation and then decreased with decreasing DO. The P/O ratio (ATP molecules produced per O atom consumed) appears to change from 2 to 3 between 10 and 0.5% DO. The specific ATP production rate calculated using this assumption decreases only slightly with decreasing DO. The optimum DO of 50% for antibody production is different than the optimum (approximately 0.5% DO) for cell growth.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The steady‐state metabolic parameters for a hybridoma cell line have been determined in continuous suspension–perfusion culture over a wide range of perfusion rates and cell bleed rates. Significant increases in viable cell concentrations and volumetric productivities were achieved at h
To investigate the effects of lactate on cell growth and antibody production, a new method of maintaining the lactate concentration constant in a fed-batch culture is described. When the pH was initially adjusted by sodium hydroxide, the specific growth rate decreased and specific death rate increas