EP2304017A2 - Verfahren und vorrichtung zur rückhaltung und rückführung von zellen - Google Patents

Verfahren und vorrichtung zur rückhaltung und rückführung von zellen

Info

Publication number
EP2304017A2
EP2304017A2 EP09765570A EP09765570A EP2304017A2 EP 2304017 A2 EP2304017 A2 EP 2304017A2 EP 09765570 A EP09765570 A EP 09765570A EP 09765570 A EP09765570 A EP 09765570A EP 2304017 A2 EP2304017 A2 EP 2304017A2
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
channels
cells
hollow cylinder
bioreactor
cell
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP09765570A
Other languages
German (de)
English (en)
French (fr)
Inventor
Joerg Kauling
Björn FRAHM
Marc Jenne
Helmut Brod
Stephan Kirchner
Arndt Braun
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Bayer Intellectual Property GmbH
Original Assignee
Bayer Technology Services GmbH
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bayer Technology Services GmbH filed Critical Bayer Technology Services GmbH
Publication of EP2304017A2 publication Critical patent/EP2304017A2/de
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M23/00Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
    • C12M23/02Form or structure of the vessel
    • C12M23/06Tubular
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M23/00Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
    • C12M23/26Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges flexible
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M29/00Means for introduction, extraction or recirculation of materials, e.g. pumps
    • C12M29/06Nozzles; Sprayers; Spargers; Diffusers
    • C12M29/08Air lift
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M33/00Means for introduction, transport, positioning, extraction, harvesting, peeling or sampling of biological material in or from the apparatus
    • C12M33/22Settling tanks; Sedimentation by gravity

Definitions

  • the invention relates to a device for the retention and recycling of cells in a continuously or intermittently perfused vessel, which can be operated inside or outside a bioreactor.
  • the invention further relates to a method for the retention and recycling of cells inside or outside a bioreactor.
  • the invention relates to a method for producing a device with which cells can be retained and returned in a continuously or batch-flowed vessel.
  • Continuous bioreactors can achieve high cell densities and high productivity with the following requirements:
  • a bioreactor with an efficient cell restraint system e.g. also be used for the cultivation of precultures with particularly high cell densities.
  • the cell retention system is then used in a discontinuous manner to remove cell culture supernatant almost free of biomass. Thereafter, the preculture reactor can be refilled with fresh nutrient medium and the culture can be brought in this way to higher cell densities than in simple batchwise operation.
  • membranes can be wound as tubes on cylindrical basket stators (Henzler, H.-J., Kauling, J., Oxygenation of Cell Cultures, Bioprocess Engineering, 9, 1993, 61-75, EP A 0172478, EP A 0240560).
  • the hoses are placed close to each other with the shortest possible distance.
  • the concentrically arranged tube membranes are flowed through in the radial direction in order to reduce the liquid-side mass transfer resistance.
  • Fine bubble fumigation has been established in recent years to supply cells with dissolved oxygen (Nienow, AW, Reactor Engineering in Large Scale Animal Cell Culture, Cytotechnology, 50, 1-3, 2006, 9-33, Varley, J., Birch, J., Reactor design for large scale suspension animal cell culture, Cytotechnology, 29, 3, 2004, 177-205).
  • Fine-bubble gassing is produced with the aid of special sintered bodies of metallic and ceramic materials, filter plates or laser-perforated plates, the pores or holes generally being smaller than 15 ⁇ m.
  • very fine gas bubbles are produced, which have a low tendency to coalesce in the media normally used in cell culture.
  • the stirrer is only the distribution of the fine gas bubbles in the bioreactor, but not their production as a task.
  • cell restraint systems with small working volumes and associated short cell residence times are desirable.
  • centrifuges were developed for the separation of cells in the centrifugal field. However, these centrifuges only work for a few weeks without maintenance effort. The replacement of centrifuge elements required during maintenance increases the risk of sterility.
  • the inclined channel separators are connected to the bioreactor via an external circuit.
  • hoses and pumps are required, the use of which increases the complexity of the system and thus the risk of error.
  • the shear stress of the cells is increased.
  • Bioreactors are also described in which the cell retention system is located within the bioreactor.
  • EP 0 227 774 B1 describes a continuously operated fermentation vessel in which the retention of the cells takes place within an airlift loop reactor.
  • the airlift loop flow directs the cell suspension around the internal, flow-calmed settling zone formed by vertical partitions.
  • the cells deposited in the settling zone are transferred to the moving cell tion, while culture supernatant is withdrawn at the top of the settling zone.
  • the disadvantage of the described vertically acting restraint is their difficult scalability. This leads to a disproportionate increase in the separator volume compared to the fermentation zone. The result is high residence times of the cells in not sufficiently supplied separators with the consequence of a reduced productivity of the reactor system.
  • the invention therefore relates to a device for retaining and returning cells in a flow-through vessel comprising a plurality of juxtaposed channels, wherein the channels form a stationary hollow cylinder and with respect to the longitudinal axis of the hollow cylinder by an angle ß between 10 ° and 60 °, inclined are.
  • the perfused vessel may be a bioreactor or a cell retention and recycling vessel connected to a bioreactor.
  • the flow through the vessel can be continuous or batchwise, preferably it is continuous.
  • the channels are open at the bottom. At the top they lead into a common annulus, which has at least one line through which a crop stream can be transported out of the vessel.
  • the separation of cells and cell culture solution takes place.
  • cell culture solution and cells are drawn into the channels.
  • the cells sediment within the obliquely arranged channels and slide out of the channels as in conventional inclined channel separators in countercurrent to the incoming crop stream and remain with it in the vessel.
  • the cell culture solution separated from the cells is transported through the channels into the annulus above the channels and finally out of the vessel.
  • the channels have a square, elliptical or round cross-section.
  • the inclined channel plates known from the prior art have a rectangular profile.
  • the separation surface for the sedimenting cells is flat in rectangular profiles.
  • a square channel with the cross-sectional width d has a larger separation area than a round channel with the same diameter d.
  • the channels therefore preferably have a cross-section which decreases toward their underside.
  • the channel cross-section on the underside particularly preferably has a semicircular or elliptical profile.
  • the dimensioning of the channels depends on the type of cells to be retained, the size of the bioreactor and the throughput.
  • the required separation area A er f results from the sedimentation rate ws, the perfusion rate qlV (medium throughput q per bioreactor volume V) and the Bioreactor volume according to Eq. 1.
  • An efficiency ⁇ takes into account the reduction in capacity of inclined channel separators over vertical separators (equation 2).
  • Z is the number of channels
  • is the angle by which the channels are tilted with respect to the direction of gravity
  • d is the inner diameter
  • L is the length of the channels
  • the angle ⁇ depends on the settling and slipping behavior of the cells and is preferably 10 ° ⁇ ⁇ 60 °. In a preferred embodiment, the angle ⁇ is between 15 ° and 45 °, more preferably between 25 ° to 35 °.
  • the device can be made to vibrate by suitable means, such as pneumatic or electric vibrators. At high volume concentration or cell densities> 20 million cells / milliliter and limited vibration possibility angles of 20 ° ⁇ ß ⁇ 35 ° are particularly preferred.
  • the channel width d (maximum cross-sectional width, with a round profile the diameter of the channel) is preferably d> 3 mm in order to prevent clogging of the channels.
  • channels with a channel width of 3 mm to 100 mm, preferably from 5 mm to 20 mm, particularly preferably 5 mm are used to safely avoid on the one hand Verblockungszunot, but on the other hand, the space-time yield-reducing volume ratio of separator and bioreactor space keep as low as possible.
  • the channel length depends on the vertically available container internal dimension, or according to the levels to be realized in the reactors. Short channel lengths can lead to distribution problems due to the reduced pressure losses, which may require a complex distribution device for reducing the withdrawal speeds, in particular when removing the harvest solution from the upper annular space.
  • the dynamic pressure at the extraction point should be at least 5 to 10 times smaller than the pressure loss in the channels. In this respect, channel lengths from 0.1 m are to be regarded as technically feasible, while channel lengths of 0.2 m to 5 m are preferred or from 0.4 m to 2 m are particularly preferred.
  • the device according to the invention comprises 2 to 10 channels, preferably 10 to 100,000, particularly preferably 100 to 10,000 channels.
  • the jacket of the stationary hollow cylinder formed by the channels comprises one or more layers of channels. It preferably comprises 1 to 100 layers, more preferably - 1 to 10 layers, in particular when internally installed in a bioreactor.
  • the layers may be arranged annularly or spirally around each other.
  • the layers can be connected to a stator that provides mechanical support.
  • the cylinder When installed in the bioreactor, the cylinder preferably has a height of 30% to 95%, particularly preferably 60% -90%, of the filling height of the bioreactor.
  • This installation allows a directed flow around the cylinder.
  • the flow around the cylinder has the advantage that the cylindrical bioreactor wall can continue to be used, for example, for the heat exchange or for accommodating sensors when the separator device is installed. Circulating flow also suspends particles induced or favored.
  • Favorable bottom shapes of the bioreactor have rounded corners or are designed as dished or round bottom.
  • the sedimenting particles eg the microbial or eukaryotic cells
  • the soil center where they are detected and resuspended by the upward flow induced by the fumigation, if necessary with the aid of stirring systems.
  • favorable cylinder diameters are 50-85% of the reactor diameter, depending on the separator surface to be accommodated or the number of annular or spiral channel layers to be applied. It must be ensured that the Ringfiambae located between bioreactor wall and stator 5-300%, particularly preferably 100% of the cylinder cross-section can take. In this way it is ensured that a circulation flow can be induced with high efficiency without too much friction losses.
  • the required separator surfaces depend on the sedimentation properties of the cells as well as the desired perfusion rates and cell concentrations. Preferred perfusion rates are in the range between 0.2 - 40 l / day, more preferred between 0.5 and 20 l / day. Depending on the sedimentation properties of the cells (depending on the concentration, size and agglomeration tendency of the cells) in the range between 0.1 and 100 m / m, preferred precipitation areas per bioreactor volume are particularly preferred between 2 and 20 m / m.
  • the outwardly and inwardly directed lateral surfaces of the cylinder are preferably sealed in order to prevent the penetration of cells into the channel spaces and thus fouling.
  • a cylinder in the sense of the present description is limited by two parallel, planar surfaces (top and top surface) and a cylindrical surface which is formed by parallel straight lines. It is created by shifting a flat guide along a straight line that is not in this plane. Accordingly, the cylinder formed by the channels may have different shapes. It may be, for example, a circular cylinder, a cylinder with elliptical base or a prism, ie a cylinder with a polygon (triangle, square, pentagon, ...) act as a base. There are other forms conceivable, such as the arrangement of the channels in the form of a truncated cone. It is preferably a cylinder with a circular or elliptical base.
  • the cylinder has an inner channel (hollow cylinder), the runs parallel to the lateral surface and preferably has the same cross-sectional shape as the base.
  • pipes or hoses are used as channels.
  • materials are e.g. Plastics or metals in question.
  • plastics known to those skilled in the art such as Teflon, silicone rubber (referred to below as “silicone” for short), polyethylene or polypropylene.
  • silicone rubber referred to below as "silicone” for short
  • materials with a low tendency to adhere biomass to the pipes or hoses Silicone is particularly suitable because it can be processed very well with a sufficient quality for pharmaceutical processes.
  • it is oxygen permeable, so that an oxygen supply can be realized to some extent even within the channels.
  • the outer space can be flushed around the channels with oxygen-containing gas. This is done by means of gas supply and discharge into the interspace of the channels, i. fed between the upper and lower channel socket.
  • the device according to the invention as a whole or parts of the device according to the invention are preferably designed as disposable articles in order to avoid the problem of cleaning.
  • silicone tubes are used as channels.
  • the silicone tubes are preferably connected to each other mats and wound until reaching the desired Abscheide Scheme in one or more layers on a cylindrical stator.
  • the mats from inclined hoses are preferably designed as a disposable element, which reduces the cost of providing a purified according to the Pharmagund accountsn retention system to a minimum.
  • a tube or tube is wound as a channel via a cylinder.
  • the individual turns are preferably close to each other. It can be several layers of hose or tube are wound over each other, if in the device several layers
  • Channels are required.
  • the individual turns are preferably mechanically interconnected, for example by gluing.
  • the number of turns gives the number Z of the later channels.
  • the wound tube or the wound hose is cut transversely to the windings. This is done in a spiral around the cylinder (see for example Figure 3).
  • the slope of the spiral gives the later angle of the inclined channels.
  • the result is a mat of one or more plies on sloped channels (see, e.g., Figure 4).
  • the mat can be connected at the sloping ends, so that a stocking is created (hollow cylinder).
  • This can be mounted on a supporting body (stator) if necessary (see for example Figure 5). While the underside of the channels remains open, the upper side is connected to a holder in such a way that an annular space is created above the channels, in which, during operation of the device, the liquid streams flowing through the individual channels converge.
  • the inside and outside of the hollow cylinder be sealed to the outside to prevent cell culture solution and cells from penetrating into the spaces between the channels and causing fouling.
  • the interstices between the channels at the bottom and top of the hollow cylinder should be hermetically sealed to prevent the ingress of cell culture solution and cells.
  • This special design feature of the hermetically sealed channel exterior space makes it possible to flush this space with oxygen-enriched gas.
  • oxygen permeable materials for the channels preferably silicone, the retained cells in the separation chamber can be oxygenated.
  • the device according to the invention is formed from a profiled foil (see eg FIG. 6).
  • a profiled film preferably has a smooth side and a side with a series of webs and grooves at equal intervals. Channels are formed in the spiral or shell-shaped winding of the film in one or more layers, for example on a stator. The channels are closed towards the open side in each case by the smooth side of an adjacent layer or by the wall of the stator.
  • the geometry of the channels is determined by the ratio of web height hs to channel width b.
  • hs / b ratios are, depending on the nature (formability, elasticity, deep drawability) between 0.33 to 5. It should be noted that both dimensions hs and b each greater than or equal to 3 mm, or preferably greater than or should be equal to 5 mm. Preferred hs / b ratios are from 0.5 to 3.
  • the web widths bs are determined by the mechanical stability of the film material. The web widths bs should be as small as possible in order to allow high shear surfaces per settler volume. At the same time they should not be too low, in order to allow a non-positive connection with the lower layer without changing the shape.
  • mats with obliquely arranged channels are therefore arranged like a shell, each shell being formed by a mat formed into a hollow cylinder and the individual mats being able to be rotated with respect to their adjacent mats by 180 ° with respect to one of the longitudinal axes of the mat. In a preferred embodiment, the mat of each second shell is rotated 180 °.
  • the profiled film may be formed by molding directly in film production or by bonding (e.g., bonding) an embossed, hot or cold-formed film to a smooth film.
  • the material properties of the embossed and smooth film can be optimally adapted to their different functionality (good sliding properties and dimensional stability of the embossed film, good sealing properties of the smooth film), i. by
  • the described methods allow the simple and inexpensive production of a device for the retention and recycling of cells.
  • the geometry of the later device can be easily and accurately determined.
  • the geometry of the later device can be easily and accurately determined by the choice of perforated film and the number of windings (layers).
  • the described methods allow, in particular, the cost-effective production of disposable elements, by the use of which the expense of providing a retention system purified according to the pharmaceutical principles can be reduced to a minimum.
  • the device according to the invention can be easily connected and operated inside or outside a bioreactor. Connection, operation and maintenance are easy.
  • the embodiment of the device according to the invention or parts of the device according to the invention as a disposable element eliminates cleaning problems.
  • the use of the device according to the invention within a bioreactor reduces the formation of temperature and density gradients within the settling zone, so that unwanted convection currents and an associated negative influence on the
  • the separator device is therefore used within a bioreactor. There it divides the fermentation zone into two areas, into a cylindrical interior and into an annular outer space.
  • the device according to the invention is combined with means for generating a circulating flow.
  • the circulating flow promotes the cell culture solution with the Cells therein through the cylindrical interior along the outer surface of the cylindrical device through the annular outer space and again through the cylindrical interior.
  • Suitable means for generating the circulating flow are, for example, mechanical stirrers or gassing systems.
  • the circulating flow is realized by means of a system for fine-bubble gassing, so that both the oxygen input can be realized via the bubble gassing and a natural circulation between both fermentation areas can be induced without the need for an additional stirring element.
  • the described, highly integrated reactor leads to numerous advantages for cell culture fermentation fermentation:
  • the circulation reactor is low-shear and has an excellent
  • the reactor wall can still be used for heat exchange despite the separator installation, so that integration into existing fermentation plants is ensured.
  • Separator volume with the bioreactor volume) retention surface within the bioreactor eliminates the coupling of bioreactor and separator after autoclaving, which is associated with an increased risk of infection.
  • a bioreactor in combination with the device according to the invention is designed as an air-lift bioreactor (cf., for example, EP 0 227 774 B1), in which the gas, for example air, is directed into an upward part of the Bioreactor, in the professional world also known as a riser initiated.
  • a fine bubble fumigation takes place, wherein the use of surfactants to avoid foam and to keep away the cells of shear-intensive gaseous interfaces may be helpful.
  • the riser communicates at its upper and lower ends with the upper and lower ends of another upwardly directed portion of the bioreactor, known in the art as a downcomer.
  • One widely used variant of the substantially cylindrical air lift bioreactor includes a centrally located cylindrical guide tube which directs the air lift bioreactor into a riser within the draft tube and a downcomer in the annulus between the draft tube and the container outer wall of the Air-Lift bioreactor.
  • the buoyancy part in the annular space between the guide tube and the container outer wall and the driven part can be located within the guide tube.
  • the supply of, for example, oxygen-enriched gas at the lower end of the riser reduces the average density of the suspension culture in the riser, resulting in an upward liquid flow in the riser, which subsequently replaces the liquid content of the downcomer, which in turn flows back to the riser's lower end , In this way, a liquid circulation is generated which sufficiently mixes the suspension culture and keeps the cells in suspension, ie in free suspension.
  • the advantage of a bioreactor stirred in this way is that, if the cells are sufficiently supplied with oxygen dissolved in the nutrient medium and sufficient disposal of the carbon dioxide formed during the depletion, that no moving parts, such as a mechanical stirrer, are necessary.
  • the cross-sectional areas of the riser and the downcomer are essentially the same.
  • the device according to the invention forms a guide tube between the downcomer and the riser of a continuously operated air-lift bioreactor.
  • a further preferred embodiment is the spatially separate arrangement of fermentation zone and separation zone, ie the device according to the invention is connected externally to the bioreactor.
  • the supply of the separator is ensured by at least two pumps, preferably low-shear peristaltic pumps.
  • the pumps allow the removal of the cell culture solution from the bioreactor space, whose Supply after cooling via a heat exchanger to the settling apparatus, the removal of the crop stream from the settler and the return transport of the concentrate stream to the bioreactor.
  • the cooling device required for cooling the fermentation medium can be integrated into the housing of the separator, which is preferably designed as a disposable element, and thus likewise be designed as a disposable element, so that the cleaning requirement required for this essential device is also eliminated.
  • a perfusion reactor consisting of bioreactor and internal or external retention device can be operated in a known manner. Nutrient medium is supplied continuously, and cell-poor cell culture supernatant is continuously removed.
  • the perfusion reactor can be operated at high perfusion rates q / V (media throughput q per bioreactor volume V), if this makes biological sense and a sufficient separator surface is provided.
  • a bioreactor with internal or external restraint device can be operated in such a way that a culture is initially allowed to grow up batchwise. If the medium is consumed so far that no appreciable construction of biomass is no longer possible, the culture supernatant, which is virtually free of biomass, is withdrawn via the internal or external retention device. The space obtained in the bioreactor can then be used to supply fresh nutrient medium, which allows further growth and thus a higher total biomass productivity. This method is suitable for
  • the bioreactor can be used to grow cells growing in vitro and in free suspension or on microcarriers.
  • Preferred cells include protozoa, as well as adhesive and nonadhesive eukaryotic cells of human, animal or plant origin, which are capable, for example, of genetically engineered modifications to produce specific pharmaceutical agents such as viruses, proteins, enzymes, antibodies or diagnostic structures.
  • Cells, insect cells, baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells, Chinese hamster ovary are particularly preferably used for high-performance pharmaceutical production (CHO) cells, HKB cells (produced by the fusion of human HEK 293 cell line with the human Burkitt Lyphoma cell line 2B8) or hybridoma cells.
  • the present invention further provides a method for retention and
  • the vessel is supplied continuously or batchwise fresh and / or treated medium and used
  • the device consists of a plurality of obliquely arranged channels, which form a stationary hollow cylinder and with respect to the
  • the inclined channels there is preferably a flow velocity which allows the preservation of laminar flow states according to Re ⁇ 2300, thus avoiding an efficiency-reducing resuspension of the deposited cells against the earth's gravity field.
  • the Reynolds number Re can be calculated according to Eq. 6 are calculated from the cross-section averaged flow velocity w, the kinematic viscosity v of the flowing medium and the inner diameter d of a channel:
  • the cells are retained within the bioreactor. Uniform temperatures exist in the bioreactor and in the separator zone, so that convection currents in the separator are excluded.
  • the cells are also able to continue their metabolism and to breathe oxygen.
  • an oxygen-enriched gas By flushing the outer space of the device with an oxygen-enriched gas, the oxygen consumption can be counteracted and their biological consequences are mitigated.
  • the oxygen diffuses through the oxygen-permeable channel walls into the flow channel, which can thus be regarded as relatively well mixed, at least in the lower channel cross-sections, in the region of high cell concentration, due to the intensive runoff and sedimentation processes.
  • the slipping cells located in these areas have only a short residence time in the system, so that a short-term undercutting of the optimal supply concentration of the cells is usually survived unscathed.
  • the cell supply in the upper channel cross-sections is considerably more critical due to the sometimes very long residence times of 10-45 minutes, so that an oxygen supply in these areas can prove to be particularly helpful.
  • the process according to the invention can also be carried out outside a bioreactor.
  • the cell culture solution is transported with cells from the bioreactor in a vessel in which a plurality of inclined channels is arranged in the form of a stationary hollow cylinder.
  • the separation of cells and cell culture solution, in which the mixture is transported through the channels, where the cells sediment, against the direction of flow slip to the end of the channels and finally reach a settling zone, from which it carries back into the bioreactor can be.
  • the cells are cooled in the external vessel to slow down the metabolism and thus counteract a productivity-reducing undersupply of the cells.
  • oxygen supply to the sedimenting cells by flushing the channels from the outside is not necessarily required.
  • a cooling of the cell culture solution to the ambient temperature of the separator is completely sufficient, so that in addition to the desired metabolic effect convection currents are reliably avoided.
  • the inventive method allows the effective retention and recycling of cells in a continuously flowed vessel.
  • the retention and Repatriation act on the cells only moderate shear forces, which are usually well tolerated by the cells.
  • the cells are kept in the channels at fermentation temperature or a lowered temperature level and the supply of nutrients is given.
  • the mass transfer can be optimized if necessary by additional fumigation of the interstices of the channels or the outer sides of the channels.
  • the method allows the retention and recycling of cells in a vessel in which higher cell densities are to be achieved by continuous or discontinuous media exchange than in a batch culture process without media exchange.
  • the process can be used to advantage to increase the productivity of preculture reactors whose biomass is used to inoculate very large batch bioreactors.
  • the process can expand the capabilities of fed-batch fermenters by capturing the biomass during product harvest to inoculate a new fermenter in a so-called repeated fed-batch mode.
  • Fig. 1 shows schematically an embodiment of the device according to the invention.
  • Channels (10) with a round cross-section form a hollow circular cylinder (20).
  • the jacket of the circular cylinder comprises a layer of obliquely arranged channels.
  • the channels are tilted at an angle ⁇ with respect to the longitudinal axis of the circular cylinder.
  • the longitudinal axis is preferably identical to the direction of gravity.
  • Fig. L (b) shows a cross-section along the dashed line through the cylinder (20) in Fig. L (a) from above or below.
  • Fig. 2 shows schematically the conditions of the cell separation in a channel (10) with a round cross-section.
  • the channel (10) is loaded from below with the cell suspension (1).
  • the crop stream (2) is withdrawn at the top of the channel.
  • the cell retentate (3) sediments on the underside of the channel and slips counter to the flow direction towards the lower end of the channel.
  • Fig. 3 shows schematically a method for producing a mat from obliquely arranged channels.
  • a pipe or hose (200) is connected via a cylinder (300) wound.
  • the turns close to each other.
  • the turns are preferably mechanically connected to each other to ensure the maintenance of channel alignment during later cutting.
  • the channels can be connected to one another at points or even directly or via the cylinder outer surface by means of a carrier layer, for example a woven or nonwoven fabric.
  • a preferred connection is via bonding.
  • Suitable adhesives are the adhesive components known to the person skilled in the art and adapted to the material and surface properties of the channels.
  • FIG. 4 schematically shows a mat (220) of channels (10) with a round cross-section arranged obliquely at an angle ⁇ to an imaginary line along the channel bottoms.
  • a mat (220) is obtainable according to a method shown in Figure 3 and set forth in the description of Figure 3.
  • the oblique longitudinal sides (230, 231) can be connected to one another in order to obtain a position of the separator channels of the device for retaining and returning cells according to the invention.
  • several layers can be glued to one another like a shell along their longitudinal sides (230, 231). It is also possible to wind the mat to form several layers in a spiral over each other.
  • a stocking (hollow cylinder (20)) with one or more layers on obliquely arranged channels (10) is produced (see, for example, FIG. 1, FIG. This can be mounted on a mechanical support (stator).
  • Fig. 5 shows schematically the underside of a device according to the invention in a perspective view.
  • a layer of channels with a round cross section (10) is arranged around a hose stator (5).
  • the channels are tilted at an angle ⁇ with respect to the longitudinal axis of the Hohlylinder (20).
  • Fig. 6 (a) shows an example of a profiled sheet (250).
  • the film has at a constant distance on a series of grooves (251) and webs (252).
  • Fig. 6 (b) shows a cross-section through the film of Fig. 6 (a) taken along the line B-B.
  • the film can be cut into mats.
  • Such a mat looks in cross section by way of example as the film section in Fig. 6 (b).
  • the mats can be laid flat over each other and connected to each other, wherein the webs (252) of a mat are connected to the smooth underside of an overlying mat so that the grooves form channels which are closed along the webs.
  • the bonded mats can then be formed into a standing hollow cylinder and connected at the sides analogously to the example of FIG. 4. It is also possible to wind the profiled film in one or more layers around a stator.
  • the grooves (251) are closed to the open side in each case with an adjacent layer or with the wall of the stator to form channels.
  • a film of the type shown in Figs. 6 (a) and (b) channels having a rectangular cross-sectional profile are obtained. It is also conceivable to use films with other profiles.
  • Fig. 6 (c) e.g. a film with a semicircular channel profile shown. This results in correspondingly different channel geometries.
  • Fig. 7 (a) shows an example of a profiled film as a composite of an embossed film (260) and a smooth sealing film (265), which are connected by means of adhesive (270).
  • Fig. 7 (b) shows the connection of three profiled foils (250), wherein in each case the smooth underside of a foil is connected to the webs of the underlying foil, so that a multiplicity of side-by-side channels (10) results.
  • Fig. 8 shows an embodiment of the device according to the invention in cross-section perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the hollow cylinder formed by channels (10-1, 10-2).
  • the hollow cylinder is preferably sealed by a jacket (outside (13), inside (14)), so that no cells get into the spaces (15) between the channels (10-1, 10-2) and cause fouling.
  • the installation of the cell retention system (400) is shown by way of example in a bubble-agitated bioreactor (100) in cross-section.
  • the cell restraint system comprises obliquely arranged channels (10) which are arranged around a tube stator (5) in several layers.
  • the channels (10) are drawn vertically for illustrative reasons. According to the invention, however, they are tilted with respect to the longitudinal axis of the hose stator (5).
  • the preferably microfine gas bubbles generated via the gas distributor (40) ensure a natural circulation between the upwardly flowed, fumigated, in the example shown centric reactor zone (51) and the unbegast down-flow near-wall reactor zone (52). In this way, in addition to the oxygen transport gaseous-liquid ensures good mixing of the reactor.
  • the harvest stream (2) is removed after cell separation in the cell retention system (400) at the head of the bioreactor (100).
  • the particles deposited in the cell retention system (400) are transported back into the fumigated reactor center with the circulating flow. Sedimentation in the reactor is also effectively prevented by the recirculation flow.
  • the exhaust gas is discharged via connection (42) at the top of the reactor.
  • Fig. 10 shows the arrangement of the channels (10) in the form of tubes which are wound into several layers (tube mats) and in a lower composite point (11) and an upper composite point (12) are enclosed.
  • the channels (10) are drawn vertically for illustrative reasons. According to the invention, however, they are tilted with respect to the longitudinal axis of the hose stator (5).
  • the composite (11) and (12) forming material is for example a known to those skilled flexible adhesive, for example, preferably based on silicone, the preferably made of silicone hoses, which form the channels (10), tightly enclosing and in both radial directions provides smooth sealing surfaces to the inside and outside.
  • the jacket (13) is sealed with the collar projecting beyond the tubular mats against the head element (27) connected to the hose stator (5).
  • the sealed construction shown in Fig. 8 it is ensured that the space around the hoses do not fill with liquid. In a preferred arrangement, this space between the tubes is purged with an oxygen-enriched gas to enhance the oxygenation of the sedimented cells during the sedimentation process.
  • the head part (27) is connected to the hose stator (5) via a slope (28) intended to prevent deposition of cells.
  • the harvested nozzles (22) welded into the bevel (28) open into an annular space (24) just above the channels (10). In order to ensure a favorable liquid distribution with a limited number of crop spouts, eg a tangential flow guidance, a fractal flow distribution or the installation of baffle plates (25) is recommended.
  • FIG. 11 shows the classical process scheme with the external arrangement of the cell restraint system (400) integrated in the separator device (110).
  • the separator (110) consists of a cell retention system (400) and the integrated cooling device (90).
  • the liquid flows between the bioreactor (100) and separator (110) are adjusted by the low shear pumps (91) and (92).
  • Other interconnections e.g. the positioning of one of the two Pumnpen (91) and (92) in the bioreactor, would also be conceivable.
  • FIG. 12 shows the cell restraint system (400) and cooling device (90) separator (110) integrated into the housing (80).
  • the cell culture solution (1) is introduced into the precipitator via the downpipe (72), which may need to be vented, below the cell restraint system (400).
  • the cooling takes place along the riser (77) in which the cooling liquid rises in countercurrent to the downwardly flowing cell culture solution.
  • the low wall thickness of the riser (77), a high velocity of the cooling medium in the gap between riser and dip tube (76) and (77) and a helical flow installation for the cell culture solution ensure particularly good heat transfer and thus a compact design of the cooler between the downpipe (72) and riser (76).
  • a cone angle of 45 ° is particularly preferred.
  • a gas supply (21) and gas discharge (22) can be supplied from the outside via connecting stubs welded into the housing (80).
  • the use of tubing constructed channels (10) is required.

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EP09765570A 2008-06-20 2009-06-10 Verfahren und vorrichtung zur rückhaltung und rückführung von zellen Withdrawn EP2304017A2 (de)

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DE102008029307A DE102008029307A1 (de) 2008-06-20 2008-06-20 Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Rückhaltung und Rückführung von Zellen
PCT/EP2009/004200 WO2009152990A2 (de) 2008-06-20 2009-06-10 Verfahren und vorrichtung zur rückhaltung und rückführung von zellen

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EP (1) EP2304017A2 (enExample)
JP (1) JP2011529331A (enExample)
KR (1) KR20110027696A (enExample)
CN (1) CN102239244B (enExample)
AU (1) AU2009259664A1 (enExample)
CA (1) CA2728453A1 (enExample)
DE (1) DE102008029307A1 (enExample)
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WO2010115185A1 (en) * 2009-04-03 2010-10-07 Xcellerex, Inc. Tissue and organ graft bioreactor and method of operation
ES2890412T3 (es) * 2011-01-17 2022-01-19 Hoffmann La Roche Aparato de separación
BR112014020462B1 (pt) * 2012-02-20 2020-11-10 Bayer Aktiengesellschaft separador unidirecional para retenção e recirculação de células
EP2864469A4 (en) * 2012-06-21 2016-05-18 Neostem Oncology Llc BIOREACTOR CARTRIDGE AND SYSTEM
JP2015077119A (ja) * 2013-10-15 2015-04-23 カンウォン ナショナル ユニバーシティ, ユニバーシティ−インダストリー コーペレーション ファンデーション アクチノバシラススクシノゲネスを用いたコハク酸連続生産工程
US10596492B2 (en) 2014-07-09 2020-03-24 Sudhin Biopharma Particle settling devices
WO2016089874A1 (en) * 2014-12-01 2016-06-09 Sudhin Biopharma Particle settling device with annular ramps
AU2019257236B2 (en) 2018-04-18 2022-09-01 Sudhin Biopharma Particle settling devices
CN115461156A (zh) 2020-03-19 2022-12-09 苏德新生物制药公司 颗粒沉降装置
WO2021199529A1 (ja) * 2020-03-31 2021-10-07 昭和電工マテリアルズ株式会社 細胞培養装置及び培養方法
DE102020118668A1 (de) * 2020-07-15 2022-01-20 Hochschule Anhalt (FH) , Körperschaft des öffentlichen Rechts Fermentationsverfahren und Bioreaktor zur Durchführung von anaeroben, aeroben und mikro-aerophilen Fermentationen umfassend einen Airlift-Schachtüberfall
TWI751073B (zh) * 2021-04-15 2021-12-21 蘇碩彥 交叉複合式傾斜管之製造方法與生產線
WO2025027938A1 (ja) * 2023-07-31 2025-02-06 エイブル株式会社 培養装置及び細胞分離方法

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US5320963A (en) * 1992-11-25 1994-06-14 National Research Council Of Canada Bioreactor for the perfusion culture of cells
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CN102239244B (zh) 2014-10-29
US20110097800A1 (en) 2011-04-28
DE102008029307A1 (de) 2009-12-24
CA2728453A1 (en) 2009-12-23
AU2009259664A1 (en) 2009-12-23
IL209232A0 (en) 2011-01-31
JP2011529331A (ja) 2011-12-08
KR20110027696A (ko) 2011-03-16
WO2009152990A3 (de) 2011-11-24
WO2009152990A2 (de) 2009-12-23

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