10
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Highly efficient, chemically defined and fully scalable biphasic production of vaccine viruses

      abstract
      1 , , 1
      BMC Proceedings
      BioMed Central
      22nd European Society for Animal Cell Technology (ESACT) Meeting on Cell Based Technologies
      15-18 May 2011

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Vectorial vaccines are predicted to yield novel therapeutic and protective approaches. They consist of recombinant live carriers that express antigen from an unrelated pathogen in the recipient. Promising viral carriers are host-restricted pox viruses that trigger a strong immune response without ability to replicate in the human organism. A block in replication is an important safety feature that allows application even in immunocompromized recipients. However, with this type of attenuation there is not even limited amplification of the vector at the site of infection and therefore very high numbers of infectious units have to be given per dose for full efficacy. Hence, if such vectors are to be used in global vaccine programs highly efficient production processes will be required. Furthermore, to combat diseases such as AIDS, hepatitis C, tuberculosis, or malaria with these vectors, millions of the concentrated vaccine units will have to be provided annually. Any production process therefore should also be scalable and preferrably transferrable to newly industrialized countries. Latter requirement demands a robust process independent of the complex logistics and uncertainties associated with primary chicken cells, the current industrial substrate for these pox viruses and certain other vectors. We believe that we have solved most of the upstream challenges with a chemically defined suspension culture production process for three disparate members of the highly attenuated poxviruses [1]: modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA), fowlpoxvirus (FPV) and canarypoxvirus ALVAC. The process is independent of primary material and based on the continuous duck suspension cell line AGE1.CR specifically created as a vaccine substrate [2]. In contrast to production of influenza virus that readily replicates in the cell proliferation medium [3], development of a production process for poxviruses was surprisingly complicated and involves media formulations matched to two distinct phases, cell proliferation and virus production. Our process was adjusted to the different kinetics and requirements of the three examined viruses, and was studied in Wave and disposable bioreactors up to 50 L scale. For MVA, titers in the crude lysate without any processing reliably exceed the critical threshold of 108 pfu/mL and often are in the range of 5 × 108 to 2 × 109 pfu/mL. One hallmark of the biphasic process described here is controlled formation of suspension cell aggregates at the transition from cell proliferation to virus production. Such aggregate formation was achieved with distinct chemically defined media harmonized such that a highly efficient, robust and industrial biphasic processes was obtained that does not require perfusion, medium replacement or microcarriers. In addition to poxviruses, this approach was successful in production of an unrelated RNA vector and also for this reason we believe that we have developed a more general principle for scalable production of viruses that may benefit from cell-to-cell contacts: In the background of the AGE1.CR cell lines, packaging cells were created for SIN/VEE-chimeric alphavirus replicons [4]. The packaging cells were transfected for stable trans-complementation of envelope and capsid proteins from separate expression cassettes. Production of replicons was efficient using adherent (serum-dependent) cultures but only moderately efficient with suspension cultures of the packaging cells. After transfer and optimization of the pox virus production process to replicon-induced packaging cell cultures (shown in figure 1) we obtained yields beyond 108 pfu/mL. Figure 1 Biphasic process adapted to alphavirus replicons. Appearance of suspension packaging cells just prior to infection and at various time points during virus production is shown in (A). Note induction of aggregates in presence of virus production medium and cytopathic effect 24 h post induction. Yields of replicon is shown in (B) with peak titers 24 h to 48 h post induction. In summary, superior yields were obtained for unrelated viral vectors using separate chemically defined media for proliferation and virus production. The media are matched to allow highly efficient, robust and industrial biphasic processes that do not require perfusion or medium replacement.

          Related collections

          Most cited references3

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          An avian cell line designed for production of highly attenuated viruses.

          Several viral vaccines, including highly promising vectors such as modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA), are produced on chicken embryo fibroblasts. Dependence on primary cells complicates production especially in large vaccination programs. With primary cells it is also not possible to create packaging lines for replication-deficient vectors that are adapted to proliferation in an avian host. To obviate requirement for primary cells permanent lines from specific tissues of muscovy duck were derived (AGE1.CR, CS, and CA) and further modified: we demonstrate that stable expression of the structural gene pIX from human adenovirus increases titers for unrelated poxvirus in the avian cells. This augmentation appears to be mediated via induction of heat shock and thus provides a novel cellular substrate that may allow further attenuation of vaccine strains.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            New avian suspension cell lines provide production of influenza virus and MVA in serum-free media: studies on growth, metabolism and virus propagation.

            Few suspension cells can be used for vaccine manufacturing today as they either do not meet requirements from health regulatory authorities or do not produce high virus titres. Two new avian designer cell lines (AGE1.CR and AGE1.CR.pIX) that have been adapted to grow in suspension in serum-free medium were evaluated for their potential as host cells for influenza and modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA, wild type) vaccine production. Their metabolism was studied during growth in static (T-flasks) and dynamic cultivation systems (roller bottles, stirred tank reactor, wave bioreactor). High cell concentrations up to 5.8x10(6)cells/mL were obtained with doubling times of 23h for AGE1.CR and 35h for AGE1.CR.pIX, respectively. Both viruses were produced to high titres (3.5 logHA/100 microL for influenza virus, 3.2x10(8)pfu/mL for MVA). Hence, the CR cell lines are an appropriate substrate for pharmaceutical influenza and MVA production.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              A chemically defined production process for highly attenuated poxviruses.

              Highly attenuated poxviruses are promising vectors for protective and therapeutic vaccines. These vectors do not replicate in human cells and can therefore be safely given even to immunocompromised recipients. They can accommodate very large inserts and provide strong stimulation of the immune system against the vectored antigen. Disadvantages include that very high numbers of infectious units are required per dose for full efficacy. Because they are difficult to produce, improved cellular substrates and processes are urgently needed to facilitate programs intended to reach a large number of vaccinees. We have developed a fully scalable and very efficient chemically-defined production process for modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA), canarypox (CNPV, strain ALVAC) and fowlpox viruses (FPV) based on a continuous cell line. Copyright © 2010 The International Association for Biologicals. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Conference
                BMC Proc
                BMC Proceedings
                BioMed Central
                1753-6561
                2011
                22 November 2011
                : 5
                : Suppl 8
                : O1
                Affiliations
                [1 ]ProBioGen AG, 13086 Berlin, Germany
                Article
                1753-6561-5-S8-O1
                10.1186/1753-6561-5-S8-O1
                3284961
                22373097
                8ef27fce-583c-42dd-b517-bd054bf3b0ba
                Copyright ©2011 Jordan and Sandig; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                22nd European Society for Animal Cell Technology (ESACT) Meeting on Cell Based Technologies
                Vienna, Austria
                15-18 May 2011
                History
                Categories
                Meeting Abstract

                Medicine
                Medicine

                Comments

                Comment on this article