Publications by authors named "Bassem Ben Yahia"

Process intensification has been widely used for many years in the mammalian biomanufacturing industry to increase productivity, agility and flexibility while reducing production costs. The most commonly used intensified processes are operated using a perfusion or fed-batch seed bioreactor enabling a higher than usual seeding density in the fed-batch production bioreactor. Hence, as part of the growth phase is shifted to the seed bioreactor, there is a lower split ratio, which increases the criticality of the seed bioreactor and could impact production performance.

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We describe a systematic approach to establish predictive models of CHO cell growth, cell metabolism and monoclonal antibody (mAb) formation during biopharmaceutical production. The prediction is based on a combination of an empirical metabolic model connecting extracellular metabolic fluxes with cellular growth and product formation with mixed Monod-inhibition type kinetics that we generalized to every possible external metabolite. We describe the maximum specific growth rate as a function of the integral viable cell density (IVCD).

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Biopharmaceutical industrial processes are based on high yielding stable recombinant Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells that express monoclonal antibodies. However, the process and feeding regimes need to be adapted for each new cell line, as they all have a slightly different metabolism and product performance. A main limitation for accelerating process development is that the metabolic pathways underlying this physiological variability are not yet fully understood.

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We describe a systematic approach to model CHO metabolism during biopharmaceutical production across a wide range of cell culture conditions. To this end, we applied the metabolic steady state concept. We analyzed and modeled the production rates of metabolites as a function of the specific growth rate.

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We review major modeling strategies and methods to understand and simulate the macroscopic behavior of mammalian cells. These strategies comprise two important steps: the first step is to identify stoichiometric relationships for the cultured cells connecting the extracellular inputs and outputs. In a second step, macroscopic kinetic models are introduced.

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