Abstract

BackgroundAmong disposable bioreactor systems, cylindrical orbitally shaken bioreactors show important advantages. They provide a well-defined hydrodynamic flow combined with excellent mixing and oxygen transfer for mammalian and plant cell cultivations. Since there is no known universal correlation between the volumetric mass transfer coefficient for oxygen kLa and relevant operating parameters in such bioreactor systems, the aim of this current study is to experimentally determine a universal kLa correlation.ResultsA Respiration Activity Monitoring System (RAMOS) was used to measure kLa values in cylindrical disposable shaken bioreactors and Buckingham’s π-Theorem was applied to define a dimensionless equation for kLa. In this way, a scale- and volume-independent kLa correlation was developed and validated in bioreactors with volumes from 2 L to 200 L. The final correlation was used to calculate cultivation parameters at different scales to allow a sufficient oxygen supply of tobacco BY-2 cell suspension cultures.ConclusionThe resulting equation can be universally applied to calculate the mass transfer coefficient for any of seven relevant cultivation parameters such as the reactor diameter, the shaking frequency, the filling volume, the viscosity, the oxygen diffusion coefficient, the gravitational acceleration or the shaking diameter within an accuracy range of +/− 30%. To our knowledge, this is the first kLa correlation that has been defined and validated for the cited bioreactor system on a bench-to-pilot scale.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCylindrical orbitally shaken bioreactors show important advantages

  • Among disposable bioreactor systems, cylindrical orbitally shaken bioreactors show important advantages

  • The results demonstrated that the developed kLa correlation can be used to determine suitable cultivation conditions for a sufficient oxygen transfer at different scales

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Summary

Introduction

Cylindrical orbitally shaken bioreactors show important advantages. They provide a well-defined hydrodynamic flow combined with excellent mixing and oxygen transfer for mammalian and plant cell cultivations. The success of new biopharmaceuticals highly depends on their potential to compete with established products. Parameters such as a fast time to market, cost effectiveness and manufacturing flexibility are key issues that need to be considered while maintaining product quality [1]. Various other types of disposable cultivation systems for different applications have been developed. A wide range of different reactor sizes, starting with disposable screening systems in microliter scale, up to bioreactors with capacities of several cubic meters are on the market [3]. Available cultivation systems and their applications are described in several review articles [2,3,6,7]

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