Hock Chuan Yeo

and 5 more

Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells are widely used for producing recombinant proteins. To enhance their growth, productivity, and product quality, practically media reformulation has been one of key focuses with several technical challenges which are due to the myriad of intricate molecular and regulatory mechanisms underlying the media effects on culture behaviours; it is highly required to systematically characterize metabolic bottlenecks of cell cultures in various media conditions. To do so, we combined multivariate statistical analysis with flux balance analysis of a genome-scale metabolic model of CHO cells based on the culture profiles of CHO-DG44 under one commercial medium and two in-house media. At the outset, we used partial least square regression to identify metabolite exchanges that are correlated to specific growth and productivity. By using a commercial medium as reference, we found sub-optimal level of four nutrients and two metabolic wastes that plausibly hinder cell growth and productivity with in-house media. Subsequently, we elucidated that the recycling of lactate and ammonia wastes to be affected by both glutamine and asparagine metabolisms mechanistically, and further modulated by hitherto unsuspected folate and choline supplements. In summary, the current work successfully demonstrated how multivariate statistical analysis can be synergistically combined with in silico analysis of metabolic models to uncover the mechanistic elements underlying the differing performance of various media. Our approach for the systematic identification of promising nutrient targets thus paves the way for cell culture medium reformulation to enhance cellular growth and recombinant protein production.

Alison Lee

and 18 more

A robust monoclonal antibody (mAb) bioprocess requires physiological parameters such as temperature, pH, or dissolved oxygen (DO) to be well-controlled as even small variations in them could potentially impact the final product quality. For instance, pH substantially affects N-glycosylation, protein aggregation and charge variant profiles, as well as mAb productivity. However, relatively less is known about how pH jointly influences product quality and titer. In this study, we investigated the effect of pH on culture performance, product titer and quality profiles by applying longitudinal multi-omics profiling, including transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics and glycomics, at three different culture pH set points. The subsequent systematic analysis of multi-omics data showed that pH set points differentially regulated various intracellular pathways including intracellular vesicular trafficking, cell cycle, and apoptosis, thereby resulting in differences in specific productivity, product titer and quality profiles. In addition, a time-dependent variation in mAb N-glycosylation profiles, independent of pH was identified to be mainly due to the accumulation of mAb proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) over culture time, disrupting cellular homeostasis. Overall, this multi-omics-based study provides an in-depth understanding of the intracellular processes in mAb-producing CHO cell line under varied pH conditions and could serve as a baseline for enabling the quality optimization and control of mAb production.