Suspension culture in a T-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiation

Suspension culture is an essential large-scale cell culture technique for biopharmaceutical development and regenerative medicine. To transition from monolayer culture on the culture surface of a flask to suspension culture in a bioreactor, a pre-specified cell number must first be reached. During t...

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Main Authors: Genichiro Fujii, Yuta Kurashina, Yusuke Terao, Tetsushi Azuma, Akira Morikawa, Kazuhide Kodeki, Osamu Takahara, Kenjiro Takemura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-05-01
Series:Ultrasonics Sonochemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1350417721000298
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spelling doaj-fb9cb02a48c34d50ad9213f7e7b6f4de2021-04-20T05:11:42ZengElsevierUltrasonics Sonochemistry1350-41772021-05-0173105488Suspension culture in a T-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiationGenichiro Fujii0Yuta Kurashina1Yusuke Terao2Tetsushi Azuma3Akira Morikawa4Kazuhide Kodeki5Osamu Takahara6Kenjiro Takemura7School of Science for Open and Environmental Systems, Graduate School of Science and Technology, Keio University, JapanDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Science and Technology, Keio University, Japan; Department of Materials Science and Engineering, School of Materials and Chemical Technology, Tokyo Institute of Technology, JapanSchool of Science for Open and Environmental Systems, Graduate School of Science and Technology, Keio University, JapanMitsubishi Electric Corporation, JapanMitsubishi Electric Corporation, JapanMitsubishi Electric Corporation, JapanMitsubishi Electric Corporation, JapanDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Science and Technology, Keio University, Japan; Corresponding author.Suspension culture is an essential large-scale cell culture technique for biopharmaceutical development and regenerative medicine. To transition from monolayer culture on the culture surface of a flask to suspension culture in a bioreactor, a pre-specified cell number must first be reached. During this period of preparation for suspension culture, static suspension culture in a flask is generally performed because the medium volume is not large enough to use a paddle to circulate the medium. However, drawbacks to this static method include cell sedimentation, leading to high cell density near the bottom and resulting in oxygen and nutrient deficiencies. Here, we propose a suspension culture method with acoustic streaming induced by ultrasonic waves in a T-flask to create a more homogeneous distribution of oxygen, nutrients, and waste products during the preparation period preceding large-scale suspension culture in a bioreactor. To demonstrate the performance of the ultrasonic method, Chinese hamster ovary cells were cultured for 72 h. Results showed that, on average, the cell proliferation was improved by 40% compared with the static method. Thus, the culture time required to achieve a 1000-fold increase could be reduced by 32 h (a 14% reduction) compared with the static method. Furthermore, the ultrasonic irradiation did not compromise the metabolic activity of the cells cultured using the ultrasonic method. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of the ultrasonic method for accelerating the transition to large-scale suspension culture.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1350417721000298Suspension cultureAcoustic streamingUltrasonicCell proliferationChinese hamster ovaryCell activity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Genichiro Fujii
Yuta Kurashina
Yusuke Terao
Tetsushi Azuma
Akira Morikawa
Kazuhide Kodeki
Osamu Takahara
Kenjiro Takemura
spellingShingle Genichiro Fujii
Yuta Kurashina
Yusuke Terao
Tetsushi Azuma
Akira Morikawa
Kazuhide Kodeki
Osamu Takahara
Kenjiro Takemura
Suspension culture in a T-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiation
Ultrasonics Sonochemistry
Suspension culture
Acoustic streaming
Ultrasonic
Cell proliferation
Chinese hamster ovary
Cell activity
author_facet Genichiro Fujii
Yuta Kurashina
Yusuke Terao
Tetsushi Azuma
Akira Morikawa
Kazuhide Kodeki
Osamu Takahara
Kenjiro Takemura
author_sort Genichiro Fujii
title Suspension culture in a T-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiation
title_short Suspension culture in a T-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiation
title_full Suspension culture in a T-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiation
title_fullStr Suspension culture in a T-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiation
title_full_unstemmed Suspension culture in a T-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiation
title_sort suspension culture in a t-flask with acoustic flow induced by ultrasonic irradiation
publisher Elsevier
series Ultrasonics Sonochemistry
issn 1350-4177
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Suspension culture is an essential large-scale cell culture technique for biopharmaceutical development and regenerative medicine. To transition from monolayer culture on the culture surface of a flask to suspension culture in a bioreactor, a pre-specified cell number must first be reached. During this period of preparation for suspension culture, static suspension culture in a flask is generally performed because the medium volume is not large enough to use a paddle to circulate the medium. However, drawbacks to this static method include cell sedimentation, leading to high cell density near the bottom and resulting in oxygen and nutrient deficiencies. Here, we propose a suspension culture method with acoustic streaming induced by ultrasonic waves in a T-flask to create a more homogeneous distribution of oxygen, nutrients, and waste products during the preparation period preceding large-scale suspension culture in a bioreactor. To demonstrate the performance of the ultrasonic method, Chinese hamster ovary cells were cultured for 72 h. Results showed that, on average, the cell proliferation was improved by 40% compared with the static method. Thus, the culture time required to achieve a 1000-fold increase could be reduced by 32 h (a 14% reduction) compared with the static method. Furthermore, the ultrasonic irradiation did not compromise the metabolic activity of the cells cultured using the ultrasonic method. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of the ultrasonic method for accelerating the transition to large-scale suspension culture.
topic Suspension culture
Acoustic streaming
Ultrasonic
Cell proliferation
Chinese hamster ovary
Cell activity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1350417721000298
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