Rotating-wall vessels are beneficial to tissue engineering in that the reconstituted tissue formed in these low-shear bioreactors undergoes extensive three-dimensional growth and differentiation. In the present study, bovine corneal endothelial (BCE) cells were grown in a high-aspect rotating-wall vessel (HARV) attached to collagen-coated Cytodex-3 beads as a representative monolayer culture to investigate factors during HARV cultivation which affect three-dimensional growth and protein expression. A collagen type I substratum in T-flask control cultures increased cell density of BCE cells at confluence by 40% and altered the expression of select proteins (43, 50 and 210 kDa). The low-shear environment in the HARV facilitated cell bridging between microcarrier beads to form aggregates containing upwards of 23 beads each, but it did not promote multilayer growth. A kinetic model of microcarrier aggregation was developed which indicates that the rate of aggregation between a single bead and an aggregate was nearly 10 times faster than between two aggregate and 60 times faster than between two single beads. These differences reflect changes in collision frequency and cell bridge formation. HARV cultivation altered the expression of cellular proteins (43 and 70 kDa) and matrix proteins (50, 73, 89 and 210 kDa) relative to controls perhaps due to hypoxia, fluid flow or distortion of cell shape. In addition to the insight that this work has provided into rotating-wall vessels, it could be useful in modeling aggregation in other cell systems, propagating human corneal endothelial cells for eye surgery and examining the response of endothelial cells to reduced shear.
A novel population-balance model was employed to evaluate the suppression of cell death in myeloma NS0 6A1 cells metabolically engineered to over-express the apoptotic suppressor Bcl-2. The model is robust in its ability to simulate cell population dynamics in batch suspension culture and in response to thymidine-induced growth inhibition: 89% of simulated cell concentrations are within two standard deviations of experimental data. Kinetic rate constants in model equations suggest that Bcl-2 over-expression extends culture longevity from 6 days to at least 15 days by suppressing the specific rate of early apoptotic cell formation by more than 6-fold and necrotic cell formation by at least 3-fold, despite nearly a 3-fold decrease in initial cell growth rate and no significant change in the specific rate of late apoptotic cell formation. This computational analysis supports a mechanism in which Bcl-2 is a common mediator of early apoptotic and necrotic events occurring at rates that are dependent on cellular factors accumulating over time. The model has current application to the rational design of cell cultures through metabolic engineering for the industrial production of biopharmaceuticals.
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