Abstract

BackgroundCultivations for recombinant protein production in shake flasks should provide high cell densities, high protein productivity per cell and good protein quality. The methods described in laboratory handbooks often fail to reach these goals due to oxygen depletion, lack of pH control and the necessity to use low induction cell densities. In this article we describe the impact of a novel enzymatically controlled fed-batch cultivation technology on recombinant protein production in Escherichia coli in simple shaken cultures.ResultsThe enzymatic glucose release system together with a well-balanced combination of mineral salts and complex medium additives provided high cell densities, high protein yields and a considerably improved proportion of soluble proteins in harvested cells. The cultivation method consists of three steps: 1) controlled growth by glucose-limited fed-batch to OD600 ~10, 2) addition of growth boosters together with an inducer providing efficient protein synthesis within a 3 to 6 hours period, and 3) a slow growth period (16 to 21 hours) during which the recombinant protein is slowly synthesized and folded. Cell densities corresponding to 10 to 15 g l-1 cell dry weight could be achieved with the developed technique. In comparison to standard cultures in LB, Terrific Broth and mineral salt medium, we typically achieved over 10-fold higher volumetric yields of soluble recombinant proteins.ConclusionsWe have demonstrated that by applying the novel EnBase® Flo cultivation system in shaken cultures high cell densities can be obtained without impairing the productivity per cell. Especially the yield of soluble (correctly folded) proteins was significantly improved in comparison to commonly used LB, Terrific Broth or mineral salt media. This improvement is thought to result from a well controlled physiological state during the whole process. The higher volumetric yields enable the use of lower culture volumes and can thus significantly reduce the amount of time and effort needed for downstream processing or process optimization. We claim that the new cultivation system is widely applicable and, as it is very simple to apply, could widely replace standard shake flask approaches.

Highlights

  • Cultivations for recombinant protein production in shake flasks should provide high cell densities, high protein productivity per cell and good protein quality

  • What happens in shake flasks? Shake flask cultures are normally run in batch mode, i.e. all culture components are already added at the start of the cultivation, without monitoring and control of any parameters such as pH or the level of dissolved oxygen

  • Cultivation characteristics The results from 3 ml cultures in 24-deep well plates (24DWPs) and 50 ml cultures in 500 ml shake flasks demonstrate that continuous growth to high cell densities and maintenance of favorable pH can be achieved with EnBase Flo (Figure 1, Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Cultivations for recombinant protein production in shake flasks should provide high cell densities, high protein productivity per cell and good protein quality. The widely used standard system for shake flask cultures is the “Sambrook protocol” described in Molecular cloning laboratory manual [1] This protocol has already been used over two decades, often quite successfully, to produce recombinant proteins in E. coli. Shake flask cultures are normally run in batch mode, i.e. all culture components are already added at the start of the cultivation, without monitoring and control of any parameters such as pH or the level of dissolved oxygen Under such circumstances, high cell densities cannot be reached since the high respiratory rate of fast growing bacteria exceeds the oxygen transfer capacity of the cultivation vessel, and the culture will relatively soon be depleted of oxygen [2]. It is worthy of note that acetate and other acidic metabolites exhibit growth-inhibitory effects regardless of medium pH [5,6], and the detrimental effects of overflow metabolism and oxygen limitation cannot be completely addressed by adequate medium buffering

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