scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

A radial flow hollow fiber bioreactor for the large‐scale culture of mammalian cells

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
A radial flow hollow fiber bioreactor has been developed that maximizes the utilization of fiber surface for cell growth while eliminating nutrient and metabolic gradients inherent in conventional hollow fiber cartridges.
Abstract
A radial flow hollow fiber bioreactor has been developed that maximizes the utilization of fiber surface for cell growth while eliminating nutrient and metabolic gradients inherent in conventional hollow fiber cartridges. The reactor consists of a central flow distributor tube surrounded by an annular bed of hollow fibers. The central flow distributor tube ensures an axially uniform radial convective flow of nutrients across the fiber bed. Cells attach and proliferate on the outer surface of the fibers. The fibers are pretreated with polylysine to facilitate cell attachment and long-term maintenance of tissuelike densities of cell mass. A mixture of air and CO(2) is fed through the tube side of the hollow fibers, ensuring direct oxygenation of the cells and maintenance of pH. Spent medium diffuses across the cell layer into the tube side of the fibers and is convected away along with the spent gas stream. The bioreactor was run as a recycle reactor to permit maximum utilization of nutrient medium. A bioreactor with a membrane surface area of 1150 cm(2) was developed and H1 cells were grown to a density of 7.3 x 10(6) cells/cm(2).

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Mass transfer and metabolic reactions in hepatocyte spheroids cultured in rotating wall gas-permeable membrane system

TL;DR: The improved viability predicted by the model culturing hepatocyte spheroids in the RWMS, characterized by a higher O(2) permeability with respect to RWPS, was experimentally confirmed and demonstrated that the mathematical model used in this study represents a useful support to experimental procedures in order to obtain hepatocytespheroids with optimal size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Membranes and bioreactors: a technical challenge in biotechnology.

TL;DR: The advantages and limitations of using membrane bioreactors for entrapping whole cells and enzymes, including single, laminated and microporous, for the conversion of optically active enantiomers are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of oxygen penetration depth in immobilized cells

TL;DR: Based on calculations, oxygen transport in microencapsulation and microcarriers for tissue cultures are not transport-limited, but a slight limitation is expected for those in a hollow fiber reactor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling of Axial-Flow Hollow Fiber Cell Culture Bioreactors

TL;DR: A review of the mathematical modeling of axial‐flow hollow fiber cell bioreactors covers the range of diffusion‐limited to convective‐flow dominant nutrient transport conditions and demonstrates the importance of convective nutrient transport to the cell growth region.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fixed bed porous glass sphere (porosphere) bioreactors for animal cells.

TL;DR: The process intensity of fixed bed glass sphere culture systems is increased considerably and the possibility of having a system capable of both volumetric and cell density scale up and being suitable for substrate attached and suspension cells is demonstrated.
References
More filters

Adhesion of cells to surfaces coated with polylysine

TL;DR: The attachment of cells to the polylysine-treated surfaces can be exploited for a variety of experimental manipulations and is found to be the case for nuclei isolated from sea urchin embryos and for the microtubules of flagella, which are well displayed after the membrane has been disrupted by Triton X-100.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adhesion of cells to surfaces coated with polylysine. Applications to electron microscopy.

TL;DR: For example, cells of many kinds adhere firmly to glass or plastic surfaces which have been pretreated with polylysine as discussed by the authors and the attachment takes place as soon as the cells make contact with the surfaces, and the flattening of the cells against the surfaces is quite rapid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth of cell-strains and primary cells on micro-carriers in homogeneous culture.

A. L. Van Wezel
- 07 Oct 1967 - 
TL;DR: There are obvious advantages in culturing tissue cells in suspension instead of in monolayers and in using the suspension as a substrate for virus multiplication, and nobody has yet succeeded in growing diploid and primary cells by this method.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell Culture on Artificial Capillaries: An Approach to Tissue Growth in vitro

TL;DR: Artificial capillaries perfused with culture medium provide a matrix in which cells can attain tissue-like densities in vitro and products secreted into the medium can be measured as indicators of cell function or recovered for other purposes without disturbing the culture.
Journal Article

Diffusion and Convection in Normal and Neoplastic Tissues

TL;DR: The hydraulic conductivity of s.c. and hepatocarcinoma tissue was determined by in vivo and in vitro experiments and a single parameter was developed to calculate the ratio of diffusive to convective flux of solutes in the extravascular space.
Related Papers (5)