NAD+ supplementation improves mAb productivity in CHO cells via a glucose metabolic shift



doi: 10.1002/biot.202200570.


Online ahead of print.

Affiliations

Item in Clipboard

Ji Hwan Lee et al.


Biotechnol J.


.

Abstract

Aerobic glycolysis and its by-product lactate accumulation are usually associated with adverse culture phenotypes such as poor cell viability and productivity. Due to the lack of knowledge on underlying mechanisms and accompanying biological processes, the regulation of aerobic glycolysis has been an ongoing challenge in culture process development for therapeutic protein productivity. NAD+ , a coenzyme and co-substrate in energy metabolism, promotes the conversion of inefficient glycolysis into an efficient oxidative phosphorylation pathway. However, the effect of NAD+ on CHO cells for biopharmaceutical production has not been reported yet. In this work, we aimed to elucidate the influence of NAD+ on cell culture performance by examining metabolic shifts and mAb productivity. The supplementation of NAD+ increased the intracellular concentration of NAD+ and promoted SIRT3 expression. Antibody titer and the specific productivity in the growth phase were improved by up to 1.82 and 1.88-folds, respectively, with marginal restrictions on cell growth. NAD+ significantly reduced the accumulation of ROS and the degree of glycolysis, determined by lactate accumulation versus glucose consumption. In contrast, oxidative phosphorylation capacity and amino acid consumption rate increased substantially. Collectively, these results suggest that NAD+ contributes to improving therapeutic protein productivity in bioprocessing via inducing an energy metabolic shift. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Keywords:

Aerobic glycolysis; Chinese hamster ovary cells; Metabolic shift; Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; SIRT3; Therapeutic antibody productivity.

Read more here: Source link