低强度机械信号以特异性方式促进细胞增殖定制非药物策略,提高生物制造产量

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Particle image velocimetry combined with finite element modeling showed high transmissibility of these signals across fluids (&gt;90%), and LIV effectively scaled up to T75 flasks. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

生物制造依赖活细胞来生产基于生物技术的治疗药物、组织工程结构、疫苗以及大量农业和工业产品。随着对这些生物基产品的需求不断增长,任何能够通过加速细胞增殖来提高产量和缩短结果时间的工艺都将对整个学科产生重大影响。虽然这些目标主要是通过生物或化学策略实现的,但利用细胞的机械敏感性是促进生物加工终点的一种很有前景的物理途径,尽管研究较少。我们测试了利用低强度振动(LIV; <1 g, 10-500 Hz)以非侵入方式传递机械信号将促进细胞扩增的假设,并确定任何独特的信号配置对一系列细胞类型的影响都不相同。使用一组特定的 LIV 参数(0.2 克、500 赫兹、3 × 30 分钟/天、2 小时耐受期),不同频率、强度、持续时间、耐受期和每日剂量的 LIV 会增加中国仓鼠卵巢(CHO)粘附细胞的增殖(96 小时内增殖 79%),但同样的机械输入会抑制 CHO 悬浮细胞的增殖(-13%)。然而,另一组 LIV 参数(30 赫兹、0.7 克、2 × 60 分钟/天、2 小时耐受期)却能使 CHO 悬浮细胞的增殖增加 210%,T 细胞的增殖增加 20.3%。重要的是,我们还报告了 T 细胞对 LIV 的反应部分依赖于 AKT 磷酸化,因为抑制 AKT 磷酸化会使 LIV 的增殖效应降低 60% 以上,这表明悬浮细胞利用了与贴壁细胞类似的机制来感知特定的 LIV 信号。粒子图像测速仪与有限元建模相结合,显示了这些信号在流体中的高传递率(90%),而且 LIV 可以有效地扩展到 T75 烧瓶。最终,当 LIV 适合于目标细胞群时,它在介质间的高效传输代表了一种无创增强粘附细胞和悬浮细胞的生物制造终点的方法,并具有直接的应用前景,从小规模、特定患者的个性化医疗到以生物为中心的大规模商业生产挑战,不一而足。
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Low intensity mechanical signals promote proliferation in a cell-specific manner: Tailoring a non-drug strategy to enhance biomanufacturing yields

Biomanufacturing relies on living cells to produce biotechnology-based therapeutics, tissue engineering constructs, vaccines, and a vast range of agricultural and industrial products. With the escalating demand for these bio-based products, any process that could improve yields and shorten outcome timelines by accelerating cell proliferation would have a significant impact across the discipline. While these goals are primarily achieved using biological or chemical strategies, harnessing cell mechanosensitivity represents a promising – albeit less studied – physical pathway to promote bioprocessing endpoints, yet identifying which mechanical parameters influence cell activities has remained elusive. We tested the hypothesis that mechanical signals, delivered non-invasively using low-intensity vibration (LIV; <1 ​g, 10–500 ​Hz), will enhance cell expansion, and determined that any unique signal configuration was not equally influential across a range of cell types. Varying frequency, intensity, duration, refractory period, and daily doses of LIV increased proliferation in Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO)-adherent cells (+79% in 96 ​hr) using a particular set of LIV parameters (0.2 ​g, 500 ​Hz, 3 ​× ​30 ​min/d, 2 ​hr refractory period), yet this same mechanical input suppressed proliferation in CHO-suspension cells (−13%). Another set of LIV parameters (30 ​Hz, 0.7 ​g, 2 ​× ​60 ​min/d, 2 ​hr refractory period) however, were able to increase the proliferation of CHO-suspension cells by 210% and T-cells by 20.3%. Importantly, we also reported that T-cell response to LIV was in-part dependent upon AKT phosphorylation, as inhibiting AKT phosphorylation reduced the proliferative effect of LIV by over 60%, suggesting that suspension cells utilize mechanism(s) similar to adherent cells to sense specific LIV signals. Particle image velocimetry combined with finite element modeling showed high transmissibility of these signals across fluids (>90%), and LIV effectively scaled up to T75 flasks. Ultimately, when LIV is tailored to the target cell population, it's highly efficient transmission across media represents a means to non-invasively augment biomanufacturing endpoints for both adherent and suspended cells, and holds immediate applications, ranging from small-scale, patient-specific personalized medicine to large-scale commercial bio-centric production challenges.

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