Abstract

Chinese hamster ovary cell production of recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) was increased by amplification of cotransfected dihydrofolate reductase cDNA using stepwise adaptation to increasing methotrexate (MTX) concentrations. The highest producing clones were isolated at 5 microM MTX and yielded 26,000 U/10(6) cells/day t-PA (43 microgram/10(6) cells/day). Above 25 microM MTX, cell specific t-PA production rates became increasingly variable and the cDNA copynumbers decreased. No apparent correlation between the cell specific t-PA production rate and the growth rate was observed upon subcloning of the amplified cells. When MTX selection was removed, the t-PA production rate decreased up to tenfold within 40 days; this was accompanied by an up to 60% drop in cDNA copynumber. Subclones isolated after 108 days of culture in the absence of MTX were, on average, sixfold more stable than their parental cells. In culture without MTX, the maximum stable t-PA production rate obtained (over 250 days) was 7000 +/- 750 U/10(6) cells/day (approximately 12 microgram/10(6) cells/day), approximately threefold lower than the maximum unstable levels of production reached under selective pressure. Taken together, these results define a wide range of the highest t-PA expression rates obtained under MTX selection, for which stable expression without selection has not been reported.

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