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research article

Orbital shaker technology for the cultivation of mammalian cells in suspension

Muller, N.  
•
Girard, P.  
•
Hacker, D. L.  
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2005
Biotechnology and bioengineering

For large-scale applications in biotechnology, cultivation of mammalian cells in suspension is an essential prerequisite. Typically, suspension cultures are grown in glass spinner flasks filled to less than 50% of the nominal volume. We propose a superior system for suspension cultures of mammalian cells based on orbital shaker technology. We found that "square-shaped" bottles (square bottles) provide an inexpensive but efficient means to grow HEK-293 EBNA and CHO-DG44 cells to high density. Cultures in agitated 1-L square bottles exceeded the performance of cultures in spinner flasks, reaching densities up to 7 x 10(6) cells/mL for HEK-293 EBNA cells and 5 x 10(6) cells/mL for CHO-DG44 cells in comparison to (2.5-4) x 10(6) cells/mL for cultures of the same cells grown in spinner flasks. For 1-L square bottles, optimal cell growth and viability were observed with a filling volume of 30-40% of the nominal volume and an agitation speed of 130 rpm at a rotational diameter of 2.5 cm. Transient reporter gene expression following gene delivery by calcium phosphate-DNA co-precipitation was the same or slightly better for HEK-293 EBNA cells grown in square bottles as compared to spinner flasks. Reductions in cost, simplified handling, and better performance in cell growth and viability make the agitated square bottle a new and very promising tool for the cultivation of mammalian cells in suspension.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/bit.20358
Web of Science ID

WOS:000226701100004

PubMed ID

15619325

Author(s)
Muller, N.  
Girard, P.  
Hacker, D. L.  
Jordan, M.  
Wurm, F. M.  
Date Issued

2005

Published in
Biotechnology and bioengineering
Volume

89

Issue

4

Start page

400

End page

6

Subjects

Animals

•

Biotechnology/economics/*methods

•

Cell Culture Techniques/economics/*methods

•

Cells

•

Cultured

•

Gene Expression

•

Humans

•

Suspensions

•

Transfection

Note

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Institute of Biological Engineering and Biotechnology, Laboratory of Cellular Biotechnology, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Journal Article

Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

United States

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBTC  
Available on Infoscience
June 5, 2007
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/7671
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