Abstract

Manufacture of red blood cells (RBCs) from progenitors has been proposed as a method to reduce reliance on donors. Such a process would need to be extremely efficient for economic viability given a relatively low value product and high (2 × 1012) cell dose. Therefore, the aim of these studies was to define the productivity of an industry standard stirred‐tank bioreactor and determine engineering limitations of commercial red blood cells production. Cord blood derived CD34+ cells were cultured under erythroid differentiation conditions in a stirred micro‐bioreactor (Ambr™). Enucleated cells of 80% purity could be created under optimal physical conditions: pH 7.5, 50% oxygen, without gas‐sparging (which damaged cells) and with mechanical agitation (which directly increased enucleation). O2 consumption was low (~5 × 10–8 μg/cell.h) theoretically enabling erythroblast densities in excess of 5 × 108/ml in commercial bioreactors and sub‐10 l/unit production volumes. The bioreactor process achieved a 24% and 42% reduction in media volume and culture time, respectively, relative to unoptimized flask processing. However, media exchange limited productivity to 1 unit of erythroblasts per 500 l of media. Systematic replacement of media constituents, as well as screening for inhibitory levels of ammonia, lactate and key cytokines did not identify a reason for this limitation. We conclude that the properties of erythroblasts are such that the conventional constraints on cell manufacturing efficiency, such as mass transfer and metabolic demand, should not prevent high intensity production; furthermore, this could be achieved in industry standard equipment. However, identification and removal of an inhibitory mediator is required to enable these economies to be realized. Copyright © 2016 The Authors Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Highlights

  • Blood transfusions are one of the most common clinical interventions worldwide with ~21 million donated blood components transfused each year in the USA alone

  • Three cell-type specific attributes, in combination with the mass transfer characteristics of a bioreactor, determine the cell density that can be supported in a culture system: tolerance to bioreactor operation, required dissolved O2 level, and O2 uptake rate (OUR)

  • Given the importance of culture intensification to red blood cells (RBCs) manufacture, each of these was determined for erythroblast culture

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Summary

Introduction

Blood transfusions are one of the most common clinical interventions worldwide with ~21 million donated blood components transfused each year in the USA alone. Increasing demand due to aging populations, challenges of adventitious agent screening, or requirement for specific immuno-phenotypes, has created a growing search for alternative sources to public donation. New uses for red blood cells (RBCs) such as targeted drug delivery may increase this demand further (Bourgeaux et al, 2016). There is evidence that transfusion of homogenously young RBCs may have clinical benefit by decreasing the transfusion frequency of chronically transfused patients (Bosman, 2013; Luten et al, 2008). One proposed solution to these issues is the manufacture of RBC from stem or progenitor cells potentially providing an unlimited supply of cells in an optimal age distribution (Zeuner et al, 2012). Anucleate RBCs have successfully been produced in vitro from a variety of cell sources including

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