Production of a foot-and-mouth disease vaccine antigen using suspension-adapted BHK-21 cells in a bioreactor

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Abstract

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.

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APA

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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