Method for cell expansion
09845455 · 2017-12-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Cecilia Anneren (Uppsala, SE)
- Christian Kaisermayer (Uppsala, SE)
- Mats Lundgren (Uppsala, SE)
- Johanna Tschop (Uppsala, SE)
- Therese Lundstrom (Uppsala, SE)
- Ann-Christin Magnusson (Uppsala, SE)
- Gerald Blueml (Kapfenberg, AT)
Cpc classification
C12M25/16
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N5/0663
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C12N5/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12M1/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The present invention relates to a method for cell expansion. More closely, it relates to a method for expansion of cells, such as mesenchymal stem cells, on microcarriers in a plastic bag bioreactor. The invention enables expansion to therapeutic amounts of stem cells. The method comprises the following steps: a) addition of cells in cell culture medium and microcarriers to a plastic bag container; b) allowing the cells to adhere to the microcarriers while the container is kept substantially still; c) addition of further cell culture medium once the cells have adhered; d) culturing the cells under gentle and constant agitation; e) increase the surface area for continued culturing; and f) final harvesting of cells by an active detachment and separation step.
Claims
1. A method, comprising: a) adding mesenchymal stem cells in a cell culture medium and microcarriers to a bag bioreactor wherein the volume of added mesenchymal stem cells and microcarriers is between 150-300 ml, the seeding density is 1-10 adherent cells/microcarrier and the amount of microcarriers is at least 0.2 g (dry weight) per liter; b) allowing the mesenchymal stem cells to attach to the microcarriers while the bioreactor is kept in fixed position; c) adding additional cell culture medium to the bioreactor once the mesenchymal stem cells are attached; d) culturing the mesenchymal stem cells by agitation, to yield the cell culture; and e) increasing the surface area for continued culturing, wherein the step of increasing includes: i. securing the bag bioreactor in an angled upright position, at an opening in an upper corner of the bag bioreactor, by an external component such that the microcarriers are moved by gravity to a single corner inside the bag bioreactor opposite the upper corner; ii. collecting the microcarriers by sedimentation in the single corner of the bag bioreactor, the microcarriers having the mesenchymal stem cells attached thereon; iii. transferring the collected microcarriers to an external separation device using gravity flow or overpressure on the bag bioreactor iv. detaching the mesenchymal stem cells from the microcarriers inside the external separation device; v. separating the detached mesenchymal stem cells from the microcarriers by flowing, under agitation, a buffer through the external separation device; vi. adding new microcarriers and the detached mesenchymal stem cells to the bag bioreactor for continued culturing; f) harvesting the mesenchymal stem cells of step e) by active detachment and separation; wherein step e) is repeated until 3-8 g microcarriers per liter medium is reached; and wherein one therapeutic cell dose of mesenchymal stem cells can be produced per 2 liter of culture volume.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the microcarriers are provided with magnetic particles.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the mesenchymal stem cells are cells from adipose tissue, bone marrow or cord blood.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the mesenchymal stem cells are adult mesenchymal stem cells.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the mesenchymal stem cells are infected with a virus.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the bag bioreactor is an inflated bioreactor bag.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the mesenchymal stem cells are detached in step f, by using enzymes, thermo responsive agents, pH responsive agents, chelating agents and/or osmolality-changing agents.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the mesenchymal stem cells detached in step f, by addition of a protease, such as trypsin.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the external separation device comprises at least one screen with pores having circle-equivalent diameters larger than the average cell diameter and smaller than the average microcarrier diameter.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the external separation device comprises a rotating agitator.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the external separation device comprises a retentate compartment, separated from a permeate compartment by a screen sheet.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the external separation device comprises a rotating agitator in the retentate compartment and the external separation device is positioned so that the retentate compartment is below the screen and the permeate compartment.
13. The method of claim 12, comprising a step of introducing the microcarriers in the retentate compartment under agitation, and adding a protease such as trypsin to the retentate compartment to allow the mesenchymal stem cells to detach from the microcarriers.
14. The method of claim 1, wherein the external separation device comprises one or more tubular screens.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the external separation device comprises one or more tubular screens with the lumens fluidically connected to a retentate circuit and with a permeate compartment surrounding the one or more tubular screens.
16. The method of claim 14, wherein the external separation device comprises one or more tubular screens with the lumens fluidically connected to a permeate compartment and with a retentate compartment surrounding the one or more tubular screens.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(9) The invention will now be described more fully in association with the accompanying drawings. However, it is to be understood that the examples only are intended for illustrative purposes without limiting the scope of the invention.
(10) In the experiments a bioreactor has been used which provides a closed disposable system. Cells are grown on microcarriers which are agitated by a gentle wave-like motion and the surface area is increased by adding new carriers to the cultures as the cells expand. The surface area per gram of the preferred microcarriers CYTODEX™ 1 and CYTODEX™ 3 is 4400 cm.sup.2 for CYTODEX™ 1 and 2700 cm.sup.2 for CYTODEX™ 3. CYTODEX™ microcarriers are examples of crosslinked polysaccharide microcarriers in that they comprise spherical crosslinked dextran particles derivatized with either diethylaminoethyl groups (CYTODEX™ 1) or collagen (CYTODEX™ 3).
(11) One therapeutic cell dose of MSCs can be produced using one single 2 L bag. The method according to the invention is suitable for the production of therapeutic stem cells and for the production of viruses in bags up to 200-2000 L size.
(12) The external separation device can be a stirred cell type device 10;20 as illustrated by
(13) As the diameters of mammalian cells typically are in the 5-15 μm range and microcarriers normally have diameters well above 100 μm, the pore size (average circle-equivalent pore diameter) of the screen can advantageously be in the 50-100 μm range. Suitable screens with pores in this size range can e.g. be woven or braided textile screens. To minimize retention of detached cells by the screen, it is advantageous if the pores are not tortuous (e.g. having an average tortuosity, defined as the average pore length divided by the average pore end-to-end distance, less than 1.5, such as less than 1.2) and a high open area, e.g. at least 10% or at least 25% open area. This can be achieved, e.g. by using single-layer woven screens with a square mesh weave pattern and distances between the threads approximatively equal to or exceeding the thread diameters. Alternatively it is also possible to use other types of parallel pore perforated microsieves as screens. This could e.g. be microsieves prepared by photolithography or polymer micromoulding as described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,531,120.
(14) The external separation device can suitably be disposable, in which case it may be constructed mainly from plastics, such as e.g. thin flexible plastics or low-cost rigid plastics such as polystyrene. The vessel can be a flexible plastic bag and the screen may be a woven thermoplastic screen welded to the vessel walls. Inlets, outlets and vent tubes may be attached as ports welded to the relevant parts of the bag. The bag can be inflatable and/or it can be arranged to be self-supporting in a non-inflated state, e.g. by incorporating a foldable bottom sheet or by using a block-bottom pillow-top bag, according to methods known in the art of bags for packaging (see e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 3,282,411, U.S. Pat. No. 7,490,451 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,733,621).
(15) The separation device 10;20 can be used in the orientation shown by
(16) A further possibility is to operate the separation in one orientation during detachment of the cells and then shift the orientation for separation of detached cells and microcarrier particles.
(17) In alternative embodiments, the external separation device can be a tubular device 30;40 as illustrated by
(18) In the tubular devices 30;40, the demands on the screen(s) 33;43 are essentially the same as in the stirred cell devices 10;20 with respect to pore sizes and pore structures. Tubular screens may e.g. be manufactured by welding of flat screens to a tubular shape, in particular for tubular screens with a diameter above about 5 mm. It is however also possible to manufacture screens directly into a tubular shape e.g. by braiding or knitting of fibers. One example of such a tubular screen is the tubular braids suggested in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,354,444 and 8,201,485 for use as support materials in hollow fiber manufacture. With an appropriate selection of fiber diameters and braiding technique, hollow fiber-like screens suitable for use in the current separation devices can be manufactured.
(19) In the operation of the method, the following steps can be involved:
(20) i) Initial cultivation, where
(21) a) cells in cell culture medium and microcarriers are added to a plastic bag container;
(22) b) the cells are allowed to adhere to the microcarriers; (for sensitive cells such as stem cells, this is suitably done while the plastic bag container is kept substantially still, while more robust cells such as Vero, MDCK or HEK cells will adhere also during agitation);
c) further cell culture medium is added once the cells have adhered;
d) culturing the cells are cultured under gentle and constant agitation, such as with up to 10 or up to 10 rpm rocking rate if a rocking bag-type bioreactor is used.
ii) Increasing the surface area for continued culturing through active detachment of cells from the microcarriers and addition of new carriers, where
a′) microcarriers with cells are transferred from the bioreactor to the external separation device;
b′) a buffer (e.g. PBS) or cultivation medium is flowed through the device to wash the cell-laden microcarriers. The cells and microcarriers are retained by the screen in the retentate compartment.
c′) trypsin (or another protease) is added and the device is incubated at 37° for about 5-20 min under agitation.
d′) buffer (e.g. PBS) is flowed through the device under agitation, so that the released cells pass through the screen into the permeate compartment while the cell-free carriers are retained.
e′) fresh microcarriers are added and the cells are returned to the plastic bag container for further culture.
(23) The operation can also include a final cell harvest step, which may also be carried out in the external separation device.
(24) The transfer of microcarriers and cells to the separation device can suitably be performed through gravity flow or through an overpressure applied to the plastic bag container. This minimizes the risk of damage to the microcarriers by pumping.
EXPERIMENTAL PART
Example 1
(25) A purified patient tissue sample of cells (approximately 1×10.sup.6 MSCs) is pre-cultured in a T-flask to achieve an amount of 5-10×10.sup.6 MSCs. The MSCs and 0.2-1 g dry weight (1-10 cells/bead) pre-swollen, sterilized CYTODEX™ (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences AB), equilibrated in a commercially available MSC media, is added to an inflated 2 L WAVE™ bag (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences).
(26) The cells are allowed to adhere to the microcarriers either in the incubator during static conditions. Initially, media volume is kept low in the bag (150-300 ml) to increase cell-to-bead contact. Once the cells have attached, more media is added to achieve desired volume. During the culturing, a constant low rocking speed (<7 rpm) and rocking angle) (≦5° is used. It is also possible to use rocking speeds up to about 10 rpm.
(27) When the cells have reached 70-80% confluency (approximately one week culture period, see
(28) Outside the Bag:
(29) The WAVE™ bag is put in an upright position, allowing the microcarriers to sediment down to one corner of the bag (
(30) Inside the Bag:
(31) The WAVE™ bag is put in an upright position and carriers are allowed to sediment down to one corner of the bag (
(32) In both the above situations (outside and inside the bag, respectively) and in other cell cultivation situations where sedimentation is desired, the sedimentation of the microcarriers may be enhanced by adding magnetic particles, such as Fe.sub.2O.sub.3, to make the microcarriers more heavy, which also facilitates decanting of cell culture media etc. from the plastic bag. Even more efficient sedimentation and/or decanting is achieved if an external magnet is used to immobilize the microcarriers during the decanting procedure.
(33) When trypsination is completed, new carriers are added to increase surface area and cells are allowed to attach once again for further proliferation. The detachment and subsequently the adding of new carriers and media is repeated until 3 gram CYTODEX™ carriers in one liter media is reached with a split ratio of approximately 1:3. The final harvest of the cells is performed by the same principle as trypsination outside the bag.
(34) Trypsination and addition of new carriers to increase surface area can be exchanged by adding new carriers directly to the culture and allowing the cells to migrate over to new carriers. Four days after addition of empty microcarriers to a MSC culture most carriers in the culture are populated with cells (
Example 2
(35) Vero cells were obtained from ATCC (No. CCL81, ATCC-LGC Standards, Teddington, Middlesex TW11 0LY, UK). The cultivation medium was Dulbecco's modified eagle medium (DMEM)/Ham's F12 (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) supplemented with glucose (1 g/L), glutamine (0.9 g/L), β-cyclodextrin (0.1 g/L) (SIGMA™-Aldrich Co., St. Louis, Mo., USA) and soy peptone (2 g/L) (Kerry, Norwich, N.Y., USA). For bioreactor cultivations, pluronic F-68 was added (2 g/L) (Sigma-Aldrich Co.). For cell propagation, the cultivation medium was supplemented with FBS (50 g/L) (GE Healthcare Life Sciences). Inoculum was grown in T-flasks and NUNC™ CELL FACTORY™ systems (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Waltham, Mass., USA). For detachment, cells were washed with PBS-EDTA and incubated with ACCUTASE™ (GE Healthcare Life Sciences).
(36) In bioreactors, Vero cells were grown on CYTODEX™ 1 microcarriers (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) at a concentration of 3 g/L. The microcarriers were hydrated in PBS in a siliconized (SIGMACOTE™, Sigma-Aldrich Co.) glass vessel and then washed three times with PBS prior to autoclaving for 15 min at 121° C. Before transfer to WAVE™ Bioreactor, microcarriers were washed with cultivation medium. Cultures at 10 L scale were run in a WAVE™ Bioreactor 20/50 system (GE Healthcare Life Sciences). WAVEPOD™ II controller (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) was used to control temperature, pH, DO and agitation. The culture parameters were maintained at 37° C., pH 7.1, DO 30% and the agitation settings were 10 rpm/5°.
(37) Cultures at 50 L scale were run in a WAVE™ Bioreactor 200 system (GE Healthcare Life Sciences). Cultivation conditions were the same as for the 10 L cultures except for the agitation setting, which were changed to 6 rpm/5°.
(38) During bioreactor cultivation, samples were taken daily to determine cell concentration and morphology as well as concentrations of selected metabolites. Microcarrier suspension was withdrawn via the sample port while the base unit was rocking continuously. A 1 mL sample was transferred to a tube. After settling of the microcarriers, 800 μL, supernatant was removed and replaced with an equal volume of 0.1% crystal violet in 0.1 M citric acid and 1% TRITON™ X-100. The suspension was vigorously mixed for 45 sec and the released nuclei were counted using a hemocytometer. Cell morphology and attachment to microcarriers were determined using an inverted microscope with attached camera (Eclipse TS100, NIKON™ Instruments Inc., Melville, N.Y., USA). The concentration of glucose, lactate, glutamine, glutamate, and ammonium was measured in a Bioprofile FLEX™ (Nova Biomedical Corporation, Waltham, Mass., USA).
(39) Inoculum grown in cell factories was used to seed a 10 L culture, which in turn was used to inoculate a 50 L culture by bead to bead transfer. The cells in the 10 L culture were detached with trypsin and transferred to new microcarriers in 50 L working volume. Prior to protease treatment, the cells were washed twice in PBS-EDTA.
(40) The bead to bead transfer can be a manually and time consuming process. By using the separation device described above the trypsinisation can be performed in a closed system with less risk of contamination and a less labor intensive process.
(41) The cell growth in 10 and 50 L cultures is shown in
(42) All publications, patent publications, and patents are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual publication or patent was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.