Manufacturing mesenchymal stromal cells in a microcarrier-microbioreactor platform can enhance cell yield and quality attributes: case study for acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Brandon KrupczakCamille FarruggioKrystyn J Van VlietPublished in: Journal of translational medicine (2024)
Mesenchymal stem and stromal cells (MSCs) hold potential to treat a broad range of clinical indications, but clinical translation has been limited to date due in part to challenges with batch-to-batch reproducibility of potential critical quality attributes (pCQAs) that can predict potency/efficacy. Here, we designed and implemented a microcarrier-microbioreactor approach to cell therapy manufacturing, specific to anchorage-dependent cells such as MSCs. We sought to assess whether increased control of the biochemical and biophysical environment had the potential to create product with consistent presentation and elevated expression of pCQAs relative to established manufacturing approaches in tissue culture polystyrene (TCPS) flasks. First, we evaluated total cell yield harvested from dissolvable, gelatin microcarriers within a microbioreactor cassette (Mobius Breez) or a flask control with matched initial cell seeding density and culture duration. Next, we identified 24 genes implicated in a therapeutic role for a specific motivating indication, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS); expression of these genes served as our pCQAs for initial in vitro evaluation of product potency. We evaluated mRNA expression for three distinct donors to assess inter-donor repeatability, as well as for one donor in three distinct batches to assess within-donor, inter-batch variability. Finally, we assessed gene expression at the protein level for a subset of the panel to confirm successful translation. Our results indicated that MSCs expanded with this microcarrier-microbioreactor approach exhibited reasonable donor-to-donor repeatability and reliable batch-to-batch reproducibility of pCQAs. Interestingly, the baseline conditions of this microcarrier-microbioreactor approach also significantly improved expression of several key pCQAs at the gene and protein expression levels and reduced total media consumption relative to TCPS culture. This proof-of-concept study illustrates key benefits of this approach to therapeutic cell process development for MSCs and other anchorage-dependent cells that are candidates for cell therapies.
Keyphrases
- cell therapy
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- mesenchymal stem cells
- gene expression
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- single cell
- poor prognosis
- mechanical ventilation
- genome wide
- stem cells
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- dna methylation
- cell death
- intensive care unit
- long non coding rna
- cell proliferation
- anaerobic digestion
- high throughput
- climate change
- risk assessment
- oxidative stress
- copy number
- human health