Saratram Gopalakrishnan , William Johnson , Miguel A. Valderrama-Gomez , Elcin Icten , Jasmine Tat , Fides Lay , Jonathan Diep , Natalia Gomez , Jennitte Stevens , Fabrice Schlegel , Pablo Rolandi , Cleo Kontoravdi , Nathan E. Lewis
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Characterizing the phenotypic diversity and metabolic capabilities of industrially relevant manufacturing cell lines is critical to bioprocess optimization and cell line development. Metabolic capabilities of production hosts limit nutrient and resource channeling into desired cellular processes and can have a profound impact on productivity. These limitations cannot be directly inferred from measured data such as spent media concentrations or transcriptomics. Here, we present an integrated multi-omic analysis pipeline combining exo-metabolomics, transcriptomics, and genome-scale metabolic network analysis and apply it to three antibody-producing Chinese Hamster Ovary cell lines to identify reprogramming features associated with high-producing clones and metabolic bottlenecks limiting product formation in an industrial bioprocess. Analysis of individual datatypes revealed a decreased nitrogenous byproduct secretion in high-producing clones and the topological changes in peripheral metabolic pathway expression associated with phase shifts. An integrated omics analysis in the context of the genome-scale metabolic model elucidated the differences in central metabolism and identified amino acid utilization bottlenecks limiting cell growth and antibody production that were not evident from exo-metabolomics or transcriptomics alone. Thus, we demonstrate the utility of a multi-omics characterization in providing an in-depth understanding of cellular metabolism, which is critical to efforts in cell engineering and bioprocess optimization.
期刊介绍:
Metabolic Engineering (MBE) is a journal that focuses on publishing original research papers on the directed modulation of metabolic pathways for metabolite overproduction or the enhancement of cellular properties. It welcomes papers that describe the engineering of native pathways and the synthesis of heterologous pathways to convert microorganisms into microbial cell factories. The journal covers experimental, computational, and modeling approaches for understanding metabolic pathways and manipulating them through genetic, media, or environmental means. Effective exploration of metabolic pathways necessitates the use of molecular biology and biochemistry methods, as well as engineering techniques for modeling and data analysis. MBE serves as a platform for interdisciplinary research in fields such as biochemistry, molecular biology, applied microbiology, cellular physiology, cellular nutrition in health and disease, and biochemical engineering. The journal publishes various types of papers, including original research papers and review papers. It is indexed and abstracted in databases such as Scopus, Embase, EMBiology, Current Contents - Life Sciences and Clinical Medicine, Science Citation Index, PubMed/Medline, CAS and Biotechnology Citation Index.