To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A bioprocess is a specific process that uses complete living cells or their components (e.g., bacteria, enzymes, chloroplasts) to obtain desired products.

Transport of energy and mass is fundamental to many biological and environmental processes. Areas, from food processing (including brewing beer[1]) to thermal design of buildings to biomedical devices, manufacture of monoclonal antibodies to pollution control and global warming, require knowledge of how energy and mass can be transported through materials (momentum, heat transfer, etc.).

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    192 791
    5 231
    83 596
  • Bioprocessing Part 1: Fermentation
  • BIOPROCESS ENGINEERING FORMULAE (All in 9 min.)| GATE BIOTECHNOLGY| DBT-JRF| SHORT NOTES
  • Bioprocessing Part 3: Purification

Transcription

>>We all know something about fermentation. It's a process used countless times each day to make a variety of dairy products, baked goods and beverages. We sometimes think of it as letting foods go bad, but in a controlled way. With a little help, milk becomes yogurt... bread rises... and grains decompose, creating alcoholic beverages and alternative fuels. >>But looking at these examples only gives us a clue as to what's really happening and how we can use the power of fermentation to cost-effectively create a broad array of biological products. >>So, what is fermentation? A cell can be thought of as a micro-factory. These cells can be bacteria, fungi or specific cells from mammals, plants or insects. In Biotechnology, these cells are used to manufacture a product in a process called fermentation. >>For yogurt, buttermilk and cheese, we use bacteria. To make breads and alcoholic beverages we use yeast - a fungus! And the production of some vaccines requires the growth of mammalian cells that are infected with a specific virus. >>The product the cells manufacture is usually a chemical the cells contain naturally... or a substance that the cells have been genetically altered to create... or even a metabolic waste product of the organism's growth - like one of our examples, alcohol! >>There are too many everyday products created by commercial-scale fermentation to even list, but some common ones include: amino acids, biopharmaceuticals, dyes, enzymes, food products, lipids, steroids and vitamins. [Music Fades, Nat Sound of Process Establishes, Under For VO] >>Fermentation is a reasonably simple process. A cell is selected based on its ability to produce the desired product. A seed stock of cells is put into a small amount of media. Media provides the nutritional products the cell needs to grow. When the population of cells has grown and consumed most of the nutrients, it's moved into a larger vessel with more growth media, and the process repeats... This "scaling-up" is complete when the quantity of cells is large and healthy enough to transfer into a production vessel - often referred to as a bioreactor or fermentor. >>With plenty of fresh media now available and under tightly controlled conditions, the cells grow and manufacture product. When the fermentation is complete, the product is harvested. >>Fermentation is known as an "upstream" biotechnology process. It occurs early in the production flow, before Recovery, Purification, Formulation, Filling and Packaging. To better understand the fermentation process, we should first find out a little bit about the cells we use and what they may require to reproduce and stay healthy. Different cells have different needs. Some are aerobic - they need oxygen - while others are anaerobic and do not require oxygen. >>All cells require nutrition. A properly formulated media contains the necessary nutrients to allow cells to grow and produce. The fermentor mixes the cells evenly throughout the media to suspend the cells and supply the oxygen necessary for growth. Effective and efficient fermentation requires rigorous monitoring and control of the environment within the bioreactor. Key factors include temperature, pressure, pH - which is a measure of how acidic or alkaline the media is, oxygen - usually measured as dissolved oxygen within the media, and nutrient levels. Although the environment and the media are tailored to the needs of specific cells, the lifecycle of almost all batches follows a predictable pattern. The growth pattern has four phases: Lag, Exponential or Log, Stationary and Death. >>When a cell is first introduced to fresh media, it has to adapt to its new environment. This creates a lull or Lag in the growth timeline. After the organism adapts, the batch takes off! The cells begin dividing at a constant rate - an Exponential or Logarithmic (or "Log") increase; doubling, then doubling again, and on and on... As the nutrients in the media are consumed, toxic metabolic waste products build up, cells begin to die, and growth slows. When it reaches the point that just as many cells are dying as are dividing, the batch enters the Stationary phase. This is the point at which the key nutrients are completely consumed, the fermentation is stopped and the fermented broth is harvested. If the fermentation were allowed to continue, the cells would enter the Death phase. More cells die than divide, and - similar to the Exponential phase - the death rate increases logarithmically. Now that we have a basic understanding of how Fermentation works, let's look at an actual process and see how it all comes together. For our sample process we will look at the production of Green Fluorescent Protein, or GFP. GFP is broadly used as a biological marker. It's a fluorescent dye that's very well tolerated by most cells and doesn't interfere with normal cellular function.. In the GFP fermentation process, we'll need to add an antibiotic to protect the purity of the batch, and then - late in the process - a biochemical inducer to "turn on" the GFP gene Our materials for this process will include: A bacteria seed stock - in this case E. coli - that has been genetically enhanced to produce GFP... the basic ingredients for a compatible media which include nutrients, stabilizers, an antibiotic and an antifoaming agent... and IPTG which is the biochemical inducer that "switches-on" the GFP gene. The equipment that we'll be using includes a 300 liter bioreactor, a UV/Vis Spectrophotometer to monitor the optical density, which is a measure of the concentration of cells in the bioreactor - a glucose analyzer, to measure glucose, a key nutrient - an off-line, pH meter to help track the acid/base balance, and adjust on-line measurements, if needed... and a Broth Tank for our final product. The bioreactor is equipped with a water jacket around the vessel to regulate temperature, and integrated sensors to monitor key environmental factors, including dissolved oxygen, pH, internal temperature, water-jacket temperature and vessel pressure. The reactor also has an agitator, dedicated ports for adding seed stock and media ingredients, separate ports for acid and base supplement, air filters for supply and exhaust, and valves for drawing samples and for harvesting. Most fermentation and monitoring functions can be managed from the bioreactor's dedicated process controller. Before the fermentation process can begin, the area must be prepared. Preparation includes removing equipment and material that won't be used in the process... Cleaning and sanitizing the area and equipment... and sterilizing equipment as required by the SOPs - Standard Operating Procedures. Sterilization is used to eliminate unwanted microorganisms which can grow naturally in the fermentation media and process equipment. Also, all required materials and documentation should be gathered and prepared... and all Process Control software should be loaded and verified. The Fermentation batch process will be guided and documented with the BPR - Batch Process Record. The Batch Record leads the operator through the process, step-by-step... with each step requiring a sign-off and separate verification. This record also includes spaces for documenting key times, activities and instrument readings. The GFP fermentation process really begins with the expansion of our bacteria seed stock. After removing the specially modified E-coli from the freezer and thawing it... It's used to inoculate a small amount of fresh media in a shaker flask. After the number of cells has reached the target amount, the thriving cells are ready for fermentation. Meanwhile, in the Fermentation area, operators begin with a complete check of all critical equipment. Valves, caps and lines are checked, hoses are tightened... probes are verified and calibrated. and 10 kilograms of HPW - High Purity Water - is added to the vessel. The bioreactor is brought up to normal process pressure and held there in order to check for leaks. The pressure is monitored over a 30 minute period. If a leak is detected, the problem is corrected and the test is run again. Once the reactor passes the test, we are ready to mix the media in the vessel. The agitator is turned on, and the ingredients are added: Yeast Extract... Tryptic Soy Broth... Ammonium chloride... Sodium biphosphate... Monopotassium phosphate... and an Antifoam compound. Once all the initial ingredients are in, another 10 kilograms of High Purity Water is added... all ports and valves are closed... all condensate valves are opened... and the bioreactor begins an SIP - Sterilize-In-Place cycle. The target for sterilization is 121 degrees Celsius for 30 minutes. As soon as the temperature climbs to the targeted temperature, the condensate valves are closed, and the SIP cycle completes automatically. Both the vessel and the media are now sterile - And we're ready to add the final ingredients to our media. The glucose hose is attached to the vessel the connection is steamed to sterilize it and the separately sterilized glucose-antibiotic solution is pumped into the vessel. Then a manual pH reading of the media is taken and the bioreactor is set up for its fermentation cycle. After the inoculation hose is connected to the reactor and steamed for 20 minutes the expanded seed stock is pumped into the reactor containing the media. Fermentation now begins. The operator takes zero hour readings and begins to regularly monitor batch temperature, agitator RPMs, dissolved oxygen levels, pH, vessel pressure, optical density, air flow rate and glucose concentrations. Optical Densities and glucose concentrations are of particular interest, so they're graphed as well as documented. When the targeted levels of glucose and optical density are achieved, it's time to add IPTG to the vessel to activate or turn on the expression of the Green Fluorescent Protein in the cells. After allowing enough time for the cells to produce green fluorescent protein usually 5 hours more, final readings are taken and a sample is drawn to check the percentage of cell solids. The product is now referred to as "broth." The broth, which contains spent media and cells, is complete when the key nutrient, glucose, is mostly consumed, and the batch has reached the desired concentration. The batch is then cooled down, pumped into a broth tank... and labeled with the batch number, volume, time and date. [Bright, Rhythm-Driven Music Establishes, Then Under For VO] The Fermentation process is now complete! The harvested broth will now move downstream to the Recovery process where the cells will be ruptured to free the Green Fluorescent Protein and the protein will be separated from the other broth components.

Cell bioprocessing

Cell therapy bioprocessing is a discipline that bridges the fields of cell therapy and bioprocessing (i.e., biopharmaceutical manufacturing), and is a sub-field of bioprocess engineering. The goals of cell therapy bioprocessing are to establish reproducible and robust manufacturing processes for the production of therapeutic cells.[2][3] Commercially relevant bioprocesses will:

  1. Produce products that maintain all of the quality standards of biopharmaceutical drugs[4]
  2. Supply both clinical and commercial quantities of therapeutic cells throughout the various stages of development. The processes and production technologies must be scalable,[3] and
  3. Control the cost of goods (CoGs) of the final drug product. This aspect is critical to building the foundation for a commercially viable industry.

Upstream bioprocessing

Therapeutic cell manufacturing processes can be separated into upstream processes and downstream processes. The upstream process is defined as the entire process from early cell isolation and cultivation, to cell banking and culture expansion of the cells until final harvest (termination of the culture and collection of the live cell batch).

Aside from technology challenges, concerning the scalability of culture apparatus, a number of raw material supply risks have emerged in recent years[when?], including the availability of GMP grade  fetal bovine serum[citation needed].

The upstream part of a bioprocess refers to the first step in which microbes/cells are grown, e.g. bacterial or mammalian cell lines (see cell culture), in bioreactors. Upstream processing involves all the steps related to inoculum development, media development, improvement of inoculum by genetic engineering process, optimization of growth kinetics so that product development can improve tremendously. Fermentation has two parts: upstream and downstream. After product development, the next step is the purification of product for desired quality. When they reach the desired density (for batch and fed-batch cultures) they are harvested and moved to the downstream section of the bioprocess.

Downstream bioprocessing

The downstream part of a bioprocess refers to the part where the cell mass from the upstream are processed to meet purity and quality requirements. Downstream processing is usually divided into three main sections: cell disruption, a purification section and a polishing section. The volatile products can be separated by distillation of the harvested culture without pre-treatment. Distillation is done at reduced pressure at continuous stills. At reduced pressure, distillation of product directly from fermentor may be possible. The steps of downstream processing are:

  1. Separation of biomass: separating the biomass (microbial cells) generally carried out by centrifugation or ultra-centrifugation. If the product is biomass, then it is recovered for processing and spent medium is discarded. If the product is extra cellular the biomass will be discarded. Ultra filtration is an alternative to the centrifugation.
  2. Cell disruption: If the desired product is intra cellular the cell biomass can be disrupted so that the product should be released. The solid-liquid is separated by centrifugation or filtration and cell debris is discarded.
  3. Concentration of broth: The spent medium is concentrated if the product is extracellular.
  4. Initial purification of metabolites: According to the physico-chemical nature of the product molecule several methods for recovery of product from the clarified fermented broth were used (precipitation, etc.)
  5. De-watering: If low amount of product is found in very large volume of spent medium, the volume is reduced by removing water to concentrate the product. It is done by vacuum drying or reverse osmosis.
  6. Polishing of metabolites: this is the final step of making the product 98 to 100% pure. The purified product is mixed with several inert ingredients called excipients. The formulated product is packed and sent to the market for the consumers.

See also

References

  1. ^ Pogaku Ravindra (13 Aug 2015). Advances in Bioprocess Technology. Springer. p. 424. ISBN 9783319179155.
  2. ^ Kirouac, D. & Zandstra, P. (2008). "The systematic production of cells for cell therapies". Cell Stem Cell. 3 (4): 369–381. doi:10.1016/j.stem.2008.09.001. PMID 18940729.
  3. ^ a b Rowley, J.A. Developing Cell Therapy Biomanufacturing Processes, Chem Eng Progress, SBE Stem Cell Engineering Nov Supplement, 50-55, 2010.
  4. ^ Draft Guidance : Instructions and Template for CMC Reviewers of Human Somatic Cell Therapy IND Applications
  5. ^ "Amgen Bioprocessing Center (ABC)". www.kgi.edu. Archived from the original on 2014-07-04. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  6. ^ "Bioprocessing". www.kgi.edu. Archived from the original on 2015-03-23. Retrieved 2017-11-17.
This page was last edited on 1 January 2024, at 18:35
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.