The necessity to perform serum-free cultures to produce recombinant glycoproteins generally requires an adaptation procedure of the cell line to new environmental conditions, which may therefore induce quantitative and qualitative effects on the product, particularly on its glycosylation. In previous studies, desialylation of EPO produced by CHO cells was shown to be dependent on the presence of serum in the medium. In this paper, to discriminate between the effects of the adaptation procedure to serum-free medium and the effects of the absence of serum on EPO production and glycosylation, adapted and non-adapted CHO cells were grown in serum-free and serum-containing media.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing capillary electrophoresis coupled to laser-induced fluorescence (HPCE-LIF), it was possible to profile N-linked oligosaccharides from EPO, including species containing sialic acid, during the course of batch cultures performed either in serum-free or serum-containing medium. Although an unusual high heterogeneity of the N-linked oligosaccharides was observed by both SDS-PAGE and HPCE analysis, the patterns of mEPO glycans after desialylation by mild acid hydrolysis were found to be quite constant over the course of the cultures either with or without serum supplementation. In contrast, when the protein was analyzed by HPCE without acidic desialylation, fingerprints of N-linked oligosaccharides changed with time in serum-containing conditions.
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