Feasibility and performance of cross‐clone Raman calibration models in CHO cultivation

Author:

Machleid Rafael12,Hoehse Marek1,Scholze Steffi1,Mazarakis Kleanthis3,Nilsson David2,Johansson Erik4,Zehe Christoph5,Trygg Johan26,Grimm Christian1,Surowiec Izabella4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sartorius Stedim Biotech GmbH Göttingen Germany

2. Computational Life Science Cluster (CLiC) Umeå University Umeå Sweden

3. Sartorius Stedim UK Ltd. Epsom UK

4. Sartorius Stedim Data Analytics AB Umeå Sweden

5. Sartorius Corporate Research Ulm Germany

6. Sartorius Corporate Research Umeå Sweden

Abstract

AbstractRaman spectroscopy is widely used in monitoring and controlling cell cultivations for biopharmaceutical drug manufacturing. However, its implementation for culture monitoring in the cell line development stage has received little attention. Therefore, the impact of clonal differences, such as productivity and growth, on the prediction accuracy and transferability of Raman calibration models is not yet well described. Raman OPLS models were developed for predicting titer, glucose and lactate using eleven CHO clones from a single cell line. These clones exhibited diverse productivity and growth rates. The calibration models were evaluated for clone‐related biases using clone‐wise linear regression analysis on cross validated predictions. The results revealed that clonal differences did not affect the prediction of glucose and lactate, but titer models showed a significant clone‐related bias, which remained even after applying variable selection methods. The bias was associated with clonal productivity and lead to increased prediction errors when titer models were transferred to cultivations with productivity levels outside the range of their training data. The findings demonstrate the feasibility of Raman‐based monitoring of glucose and lactate in cell line development with high accuracy. However, accurate titer prediction requires careful consideration of clonal characteristics during model development.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Molecular Medicine,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine

Reference31 articles.

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