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Impact of cell culture media additives on IgG glycosylation produced in CHO cells.

Glycosylation is a key critical quality attribute for monoclonal antibodies and other recombinant proteins because of its impact on effector mechanisms and half-life. In this study, a variety of compounds were evaluated for their ability to modulate glycosylation profiles of recombinant monoclonal antibodies produced in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Compounds were supplemented into the cell culture feed of fed-batch experiments performed with a CHO K1 and a CHO DG44 cell line expressing a recombinant IgG1. Experiments were performed in spin tubes or the ambr® 15 controlled bioreactor system, and the impact of the compounds at various concentrations was determined by monitoring the glycosylation profile of the IgG and cell culture parameters such as viable cell density, viability and titer. Results indicate that the highest impact on mannosylation was achieved through 15 µM kifunensine supplementation leading to an 85.8 % increase in high mannose containing species. Fucosylation was reduced by 76.1 % through addition of 800 µM 2-F-Peracetyl fucose. An increase of 40.9 % in galactosylated species was achieved through addition of 120 mM galactose in combination with 48 µM manganese and 24 µM uridine. Furthermore, 6.9 % increased sialylation was detected through addition of 30 µM dexamethasone in combination with the same manganese, uridine and galactose mixture used to increase total galactosylation. Further compounds or combinations of additives were also efficient at achieving a smaller overall glycosylation modulation, required, for instance, during the development of biosimilars. To the best of our knowledge, no evaluation of the efficacy of such a variety of compounds in the same cell culture system has been described. The studied cell culture media additives are efficient modulators of glycosylation and are thus a valuable tool to produce recombinant glycoproteins. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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