Development and Validation of a Methodology for Intracellular pH Measurements of Hybridoma Cells under Bioreactor Culture Conditions

1999 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 630-639 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Cherlet ◽  
P. Franck ◽  
P. Nabet ◽  
A. Marc
2000 ◽  
Vol 118 (4) ◽  
pp. A1109
Author(s):  
Michael J. Sessler ◽  
Christina Baumstark ◽  
Joerg Weik ◽  
Michael Weinlich ◽  
Richard Viebahn ◽  
...  

1979 ◽  
Vol 237 (1) ◽  
pp. E82
Author(s):  
S J Hersey

Intracellular pH was measured in bullfrog gastric mucosa using a pH-indicator dye, bromthymol blue (BTB), with a spectrophotometric technique. Studies showed that BTB is taken up by the gastric mucosa and bound to intracellular components. The binding of BTB was shown to cause a shift in the pKa of the dye from the solution value of 6.95 to a value of 8.0. During the nonsecreting state, intracellular pH was estimated to be 7.4 (metiamide inhibition) or 7.1 (SCN inhibition). During active secretion of acid, intracellular pH increased with increasing secretion rates, reaching values in excess of pH 8. Using preparations from which the surface epithelial cells had been removed, it was shown that at least a portion of the alkaline response to stimulation occurs in the oxyntic or tubular cells. The results are interpreted in view of existing models for the chemical reaction involved in gastric acid secretion.


Author(s):  
Jean-Marc Engasser ◽  
Annie Marc ◽  
Marc Cherlet ◽  
Pierre Nabet ◽  
Patricia Franck

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 204173141775371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew C Daly ◽  
Binulal N Sathy ◽  
Daniel J Kelly

Mesenchymal stem cells maintained in appropriate culture conditions are capable of producing robust cartilage tissue. However, gradients in nutrient availability that arise during three-dimensional culture can result in the development of spatially inhomogeneous cartilage tissues with core regions devoid of matrix. Previous attempts at developing dynamic culture systems to overcome these limitations have reported suppression of mesenchymal stem cell chondrogenesis compared to static conditions. We hypothesize that by modulating oxygen availability during bioreactor culture, it is possible to engineer cartilage tissues of scale. The objective of this study was to determine whether dynamic bioreactor culture, at defined oxygen conditions, could facilitate the development of large, spatially homogeneous cartilage tissues using mesenchymal stem cell laden hydrogels. A dynamic culture regime was directly compared to static conditions for its capacity to support chondrogenesis of mesenchymal stem cells in both small and large alginate hydrogels. The influence of external oxygen tension on the response to the dynamic culture conditions was explored by performing the experiment at 20% O2 and 3% O2. At 20% O2, dynamic culture significantly suppressed chondrogenesis in engineered tissues of all sizes. In contrast, at 3% O2 dynamic culture significantly enhanced the distribution and amount of cartilage matrix components (sulphated glycosaminoglycan and collagen II) in larger constructs compared to static conditions. Taken together, these results demonstrate that dynamic culture regimes that provide adequate nutrient availability and a low oxygen environment can be employed to engineer large homogeneous cartilage tissues. Such culture systems could facilitate the scaling up of cartilage tissue engineering strategies towards clinically relevant dimensions.


Processes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sha Sha ◽  
Zhuangrong Huang ◽  
Cyrus Agarabi ◽  
Scott Lute ◽  
Kurt Brorson ◽  
...  

Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are commonly glycosylated and show varying levels of galactose attachment. A set of experiments in our work showed that the galactosylation level of mAbs was altered by the culture conditions of hybridoma cells. The uridine diphosphate galactose (UDP-Gal) is one of the substrates of galactosylation. Based on that, we proposed a two-step model to predict N-linked glycoform profiles by solely using extracellular metabolites from cell culture. At the first step, the flux level of UDP-Gal in each culture was estimated based on a computational flux balance analysis (FBA); its level was found to be linear with the galactosylation degree on mAbs. At the second step, the glycoform profiles especially for G0F (agalactosylated), G1F (monogalactosylated) and G2F (digalactosylated) were predicted by a kinetic model. The model outputs well matched with the experimental data. Our study demonstrated that the integrated mathematical approach combining FBA and kinetic model is a promising strategy to predict glycoform profiles for mAbs during cell culture processes.


2001 ◽  
Vol 73 (14) ◽  
pp. 3240-3246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kerry P. McNamara ◽  
Thuvan Nguyen ◽  
Gabriela Dumitrascu ◽  
Jin Ji ◽  
Nitsa Rosenzweig ◽  
...  

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