The baby hamster kidney-21 (BHK-21) cell line is a continuous cell line used to propa-gate foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) virus for vaccine manufacturing. BHK-21 cells are anchorage-dependent, although suspension cultures would enable rapid growth in bioreactors, large-scale virus propagation, and cost-effective vaccine production with serum-free medium. Here, we report the successful adaptation of adherent BHK-21 cells to growth in suspension to a viable cell density of 7.65 × 106 cells/mL on day 3 in serum-free culture medium. The suspension-adapted BHK-21 cells showed lower adhesion to five types of extracellular matrix proteins than adherent BHK-21 cells, which contributed to the suspension culture. In addition, a chemically defined medium (selected by screening various prototype media) led to increased FMD virus production yields in the batch culture, even at a cell density of only 3.5 × 106 cells/mL. The suspension BHK-21 cell culture could be expanded to a 200 L bioreactor from a 20 mL flask, which resulted in a comparable FMD virus titer. This platform technology improved virus productivity, indicating its potential for enhancing FMD vaccine production.
CITATION STYLE
Park, S. Y., Kim, J. Y., Ryu, K. H., Kim, A. Y., Kim, J. M., Ko, Y. J., & Lee, E. G. (2021). Production of a foot-and-mouth disease vaccine antigen using suspension-adapted BHK-21 cells in a bioreactor. Vaccines, 9(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9050505
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