The uptake of carbohydrates and oxygen by cell suspension cultures of the plant Eschscholtzia cali- fornica (California poppy) was studied in relation to biomass production in shake flasks, a 1-1 stirred-tank bioreactor and a 1-I pneumatically agitated bioreactor. The sequence of carbohydrate uptake
The effect of bioreactor configuration on production of HIV and cell-virus interaction
โ Scribed by J. B. Clarke; J. B. Griffiths
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 524 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0920-9069
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โฆ Synopsis
In an attempt to establish a bioreactor system for generation of HIV that is practicable, efficient, biologically contained, and capable of scale up, the production of two strains of this virus was examined in suspension culture and the 'Porosphere' fixed bed system. HIV 1 and HIV 2 were grown successfully in both these types of reactor. The porosphere reactor theoretically appears to offer a better environment for HIV production, but evidence for significantly improved yields from this system, compared to suspension, was equivocal. However, this configuration facilitated media changes during culture. The data clearly showed that the culture system and cell environment significantly affected cell-virus interrelationships. Switches between lytic--and persistent--type infections, and changes in the virus population were observed.
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