Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Efficient and stable production of Modified Vaccinia Ankara virus in two-stage semi-continuous and in continuous stirred tank cultivation systems

  • Felipe Tapia ,

    tapia@mpi-magdeburg.mpg.de

    Affiliations International Max Planck Research School for Advanced Methods in Process and Systems Engineering, Magdeburg, Germany, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems, Magdeburg, Germany

  • Ingo Jordan,

    Current address: CureVac AG, Tübingen, Germany

    Affiliation ProBioGen AG, Berlin, Germany

  • Yvonne Genzel,

    Affiliation Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems, Magdeburg, Germany

  • Udo Reichl

    Affiliations Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems, Magdeburg, Germany, Bioprocess Engineering, Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany

Abstract

One important aim in cell culture-based viral vaccine and vector production is the implementation of continuous processes. Such a development has the potential to reduce costs of vaccine manufacturing as volumetric productivity is increased and the manufacturing footprint is reduced. In this work, continuous production of Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA) virus was investigated. First, a semi-continuous two-stage cultivation system consisting of two shaker flasks in series was established as a small-scale approach. Cultures of the avian AGE1.CR.pIX cell line were expanded in the first shaker, and MVA virus was propagated and harvested in the second shaker over a period of 8–15 days. A total of nine small-scale cultivations were performed to investigate the impact of process parameters on virus yields. Harvest volumes of 0.7–1 L with maximum TCID50 titers of up to 1.0×109 virions/mL were obtained. Genetic analysis of control experiments using a recombinant MVA virus containing green-fluorescent-protein suggested that the virus was stable over at least 16 d of cultivation. In addition, a decrease or fluctuation of infectious units that may indicate an excessive accumulation of defective interfering particles was not observed. The process was automated in a two-stage continuous system comprising two connected 1 L stirred tank bioreactors. Stable MVA virus titers, and a total production volume of 7.1 L with an average TCID50 titer of 9×107 virions/mL was achieved. Because titers were at the lower range of the shake flask cultivations potential for further process optimization at large scale will be discussed. Overall, MVA virus was efficiently produced in continuous and semi-continuous cultivations making two-stage stirred tank bioreactor systems a promising platform for industrial production of MVA-derived recombinant vaccines and viral vectors.

Introduction

Similar to the manufacturing of antibodies, growth factors or hormones, the production of viral vaccines and vectors for gene therapy in batch cultivation is still the standard technology. Moving from batch to continuous operation can significantly increase productivity, improve the quality of products, and reduce the footprint of equipment and facilities required for production [1]. The upstream phase of continuous processes is faster and more efficient compared to batch processes because smaller bioreactors are required, volumetric yields are higher and plant down-time is reduced [2]. Hence, continuous virus production may also help to increase significantly the manufacturing capacity and to meet the global demand for low cost viral vaccines of an ever-growing world population.

One potential platform for continuous production of viruses is a two-stage stirred tank bioreactor (TSB) system. A TSB system consists of one vessel for continuous propagation of cells connected in series with a second vessel, where the desired product is obtained [3, 4]. The physical separation of the cell growth vessel from the production bioreactor allows stable operation of processes involving lytic viruses. TSB systems have been used for the production of poliovirus and adenovirus [4], for production of recombinant proteins using baculovirus [5], and for continuous production of influenza A/PR/8/34 virus [6]. In the latter, virus production was maintained over a time period of 18 d but process yields were lower than for batch cultivations due to oscillations of virus titers. These oscillations were generated by the accumulation of defective interfering particles (DIPs) that spontaneously arise due to error-prone viral replication of RNA viruses with high mutation rates. DIPs are replication-deficient and require co-infections with wildtype or helper viruses for successful propagation. At very high multiplicity of infection (moi), the replication capacity of the helper viruses is limited by DIPs which is known as “passage effect” or “Von Magnus effect” [58].

One virus that has a great potential for expression of recombinant antigens or as a viral vaccine vector is Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA) virus, a DNA virus that can accommodate large recombinant inserts and is described to be safe for humans and animals [9]. Recombinant vector vaccines based on MVA against influenza virus [10], Ebola virus [11, 12], HIV [13], tuberculosis [14], chykungunya virus [15], smallpox [16], respiratory syncytial virus [17], malaria [18, 19], bluetongue virus [20], West Nile virus [21], and also veterinary vaccines against the tick-born parasite Babesia bovis [22], have been described. One challenge in MVA production is the property that a large fraction of infectious units remain cell-associated. Because cultivation in a single-cell format interferes with the spread of MVA, processes have been developed where the virus is propagated in suspended aggregates of 20–100 cells [23]. Recently, a novel MVA virus isolate, named MVA-CR19, has been generated that can be produced at high yields in non-aggregated avian suspension cells in chemically defined media [24], which makes MVA an interesting candidate for exploring process options towards continuous vaccine manufacturing.

When a fraction of a culture is replaced with fresh media at regular time intervals, the mode of operation is defined as “semi-continuous”. Compared to fully continuous operation in bioreactors, a scale-down of semi-continuous cultures can be easily achieved for studying the impact of process parameters on cell growth and virus propagation. In addition, semi-continuous cultures can be set to medium exchange regimes that can approach continuous cultivations [25]. To name one recent example, semi-continuous cultivations using shake flasks have been used for propagation of the rat hybridoma cell line TFL-P9 [26] to evaluate to what extent semi-continuous cultures approach growth kinetics in continuous cultivations. According to this study, kinetic parameters obtained in batch and semi-continuous cultivations of TFL-P9 correlated well with those of continuous cultures. In addition, semi-continuous modes of operation have been used for two-stage production of baculovirus-based recombinant proteins resulting in high yields [27].

Here, we describe results for the establishment of semi-continuous and continuous processes for production of MVA virus (MVA-CR19, and a recombinant MVA virus that expresses green-fluorescent-protein (GFP), MVA-CR19.GFP) in the avian suspension cell line AGE1.CR.pIX in a chemically defined medium (all from ProBioGen AG, Germany) [2830]. First, a small-scale two-stage semi-continuous cultivation (SSC) system using shaker flasks was established for cell growth and virus propagation at exchange rates that approximated the dilution rates of continuous TSB systems. The impact of process parameters such as the residence time (RT) and the addition of fresh medium on virus yields were analyzed. Furthermore, by using MVA-CR19.GFP, recombinant protein expression and viral stability at the genetic level was evaluated over a time period of 15 d of cultivation. Finally, cell growth, glucose and lactate concentrations, pH values and virus yields were monitored in a TSB system (two 1 L stirred tank bioreactors), and compared to SSC cultivations. The observed genetic stability and high infectious titers demonstrate the feasibility for highly efficient continuous production of MVA viruses.

Materials and methods

Cell line and Modified Vaccinia Ankara virus genotypes

The avian cell line AGE1.CR.pIX (ProBioGen AG, Germany) was grown in a chemically defined medium CD-U3 (powder-based, PAA, Austria; liquid, Biochrom-Merck, Germany) supplemented with 2 mM of L-glutamine (Sigma-Aldrich, Germany), 2 mM L-alanine (Fluka Analytical, Sigma-Aldrich, Germany) and 10 ng/mL Long®R3IGF-I (SAFC Biosciences, USA). Cells were inoculated at a concentration of 0.8×106 cells/mL and passaged in shaker flasks (125 mL Erlenmeyer culture flasks, 2 μm vent cap with baffles; Corning, USA) at 37°C, 5% CO2 in air, and 185 rpm [31]. Previous studies have shown that this cell line has stable growth characteristics and can be used for MVA virus production [29,31]. The MVA virus isolates MVA-CR19 (virus seed: 4.5×108 virions/mL, TCID50) and MVA-CR19.GFP (virus seed: 1.0×109 virions/mL, FFU; 1×FFU = 0.7×TCID50) with a green-fluorescent-protein insertion cassette were used (both isolates from ProBioGen AG, Germany). Before infection, the virus seed was sonicated in a water bath at room temperature for 1 min. An moi of 0.05 (ratio of the number of infectious virions to the number of cells) was used in all cultivations.

Batch and semi-continuous cultivations for MVA propagation

AGE1.CR.pIX cells were cultured in 50 mL working volume (wv) shaker flasks (Corning, USA), for batch cultivations. With cell concentrations reaching about 5×106 cells/mL [31], a 1:1 dilution with fresh CD-U3 medium was performed. Then, virus infection was carried out and 4–5 mL samples at 0, 12, 24, 36, 48, 72 and 96 h post infection (p.i.) were taken. Cell concentration, cell viability, metabolite concentrations, pH offline and virus titers were determined.

A SSC system using two shaker flasks (250 mL and 125 mL Erlenmeyer Culture Flasks with a 2 μm vent cap and without baffles; Corning, USA) in series was established as a scale-down model for design and parameter studies regarding TSB optimization. All related abbreviations, volumes and the operation mode of the system are described in Fig 1. The shakers were maintained in an orbital shaking incubator (Infors HT Multitron, Switzerland) at 37°C, 185 rpm and 5% CO2 in air. Cells were grown in batch mode for up to 96 h and infection was carried out at an moi of 0.05. Samples of 3–5 mL for measuring cell concentration, viability, pH, metabolite concentrations, and virus concentration in the small cell bioreactor (SCB) and the small virus bioreactor (SVB) were taken twice a day for process monitoring. Small volume losses after sampling were corrected by adding fresh medium. After sampling, medium exchanges and addition of fresh medium were carried out. The volumes exchanged were determined with the following equations: (1) (2) (3) (4) Where n is the sample number, V is volume, tn is the time at sampling “n”, tn-1 the time at sampling “n-1”, DSCB is the dilution rate of SCB, and FM is fresh medium. The dilution rate of SCB (DSCB) was the same in all SSC experiments. The equations were obtained by performing a material balance, where the dilution rate of the TSB system F4/(VCB + VVB) is equal to the dilution rate of CB (see Fig 1B). Based on previous experiments [31], a maximum specific cell growth rate of 0.02 h-1 for AGE1.CR.pIX was used to determine the parameters for all SSC cultivations. Due to the significant amount of samples taken and time required for one SSC run (2 weeks, approximately 36 samples) compared to batch cultivations (7 d, approximately 12 samples) only one cultivation was carried out per SSC experiment (unless the opposite is indicated).

thumbnail
Fig 1. Two-stage cultivation systems used for semi-continuous and continuous MVA virus production.

A) Two-stage semi-continuous cultivation (SSC) system for small-scale MVA production using shaker flasks. Cells were produced in semi-continuous mode in the Small Cell Bioreactor (SCB; working volume 120 mL) and transferred to the Small Virus Bioreactor (SVB; 65, 120 or 200 mL working volume), where virus infection and propagation took place. Twice a day, a semi-continuous harvest was taken (V4), cells were transferred from SCB to SVB (V2), and fresh medium was added to SCB and SVB (V1 and V3). The volumes of harvest, cell transfer and fresh medium were determined with Eqs 14 (see Materials and Methods). Shakers without baffles were used. B) Two-stage continuous stirred tank bioreactor (TSB, 1 L Sartorius Biostat B plus; the working volume of CB and VB was 850 and 440 mL, respectively) system using AGE1.CR.pIX cells with a production flow rate (F4) of 0.29 mL/min. Continuous cell production was maintained in the first bioreactor (Cell Bioreactor, CB). Cells were continuously transferred at a flow rate (F2) of 0.18 mL/min to a second vessel (Virus Bioreactor, VB; dilution rate 0.0390 h-1), where MVA virus infection and propagation took place. Fresh medium was added to CB and VB at a flow rate of 0.18 (F1) and 0.11 mL/min (F3), respectively.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182553.g001

Evaluation of the influence of process variables on virus yields and virus stability

To evaluate the influence of RT on MVA-CR19 virus yields, the volume of SVB was modified to obtain a RT of 25, 35, and 64 h in the SVB (keeping all other variables constant). Also, the effect of omitting the addition of fresh medium to the VB (F3, Fig 1B) was evaluated for one SSC cultivation by reducing V3 to zero (Fig 1A). The stability of MVA-CR19 virus was done using the MVA-CR19.GFP recombinant strain under two criteria. The first criterion was that, if the recombinant virus is stable, then the ratio of the total infectious virus population (IVP) to the protein-expressing infectious virus population (PEIVP) should be constant during cultivation time. The PEIVP was measured by determining a GFP-derived TCID50 by fluorescence microscopy (described in section 2.4.2). This ratio was determined with the following equation: (5)

With IVP and PEIVP the mean of a technical triplicate. The second criterion used was a genetic analysis of the GFP insertion cassette using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) protocol (described in detail in section 2.4.2). The samples analyzed with both criteria were taken from the first and last harvest of two SSC cultivations operated over 16 d, one with 25 h RT in the SVB and a second with 40 h RT in the SVB.

Continuous production of MVA virus in a two-stage stirred tank bioreactor system

A bioreactor system consisting of two 1 L stirred tank bioreactors (Biostat B Plus, Sartorius) was established (similar to Frensing et al. 2013, Fig 1B). The first bioreactor (Cell Bioreactor, CB) was inoculated with AGE1.CR.pIX cells at 1×106 cells/mL and operated at 37°C, 120 rpm with Rushton impellers, 40% oxygen saturation and 850 mL working volume (wv). Oxygen saturation was controlled using pulsed aeration with pure oxygen. The pH value was not controlled and only monitored during the batch phase to avoid values below 6.9. When the cell concentration in the CB reached at least 5.0×106 cells/mL, 350 mL from the CB were transferred to the second vessel VB. Working volumes were corrected to 850 mL in CB and 440 mL in VB by adding fresh CD-U3 medium and continuous culture was initiated 2 h later and maintained without infection for 8 d. The dilution rate of CB (DCB) was as reported previously [6], and the dilution rate of VB (DVB) was 0.04 h-1 (25 h RT). Temperature of VB was 37°C, oxygen concentration was at 40–50% saturation, and the 440 mL wv was maintained with a dip tube. Before infection, a 1:1 dilution of VB was carried out, and the cultivation continued at 440 mL wv. MVA-CR19 virus was added to VB at an moi of 0.05. The peristaltic pumps used were Ismatec Reglo-Digital MS2/8-160 (Pump 1 and 2, Fig 1B; Cole-Parmer GmbH, Germany), and Watson Marlow 101U/R (Pump 3, Fig 1B; Waston-Marlow Fluid Technology Group, UK). Samples of 5–6 mL were taken twice a day from both vessels for measuring cell concentration, viability, off-line pH, metabolite concentrations, and virus concentration.

Analytics

Cell concentration, viability, and metabolite concentrations.

A ViCellTM XR cell viability analyzer (Beckman Coulter GmbH, Germany) was used for determining AGE1.CR.pIX cell concentration and viability, with a standard deviation of 5% [28]. Glucose and lactate were determined to avoid media limitations using a BioProfile 100 Plus (Nova) analyzer; the relative standard deviation of the method is 1.9% for glucose and 10.5% for lactate, respectively.

Virus quantification assay, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) protocol used for MVA-CR19.GFP virus stability analysis.

The concentration of infectious virus particles was quantified by a TCID50 assay as described previously [29]. In addition, the GFP-derived TCID50 titer was obtained by measuring cell fluorescence using a fluorescence microscope (λ 495 nm, Axio Observer A1, Zeiss, Germany). The GFP-assay was carried out immediately before performing the regular TCID50 staining procedure. The PCR was carried out by mixing the infected cell suspension (80 μL) with 20 μL of QuickExtract DNA Extraction Solution 1.0 (Epicentre, USA) and heated to 65°C for 10 min and to 98°C for 5 min. Of this preparation, 4 μL were used in a PCR reaction in a final volume of 20 μL with 0.15 μL Taq polymerase (Qiagen, Germany), 200 nM of each primer, and 125 μM of each nucleotide. The sequence of the primer pairs that span deletion sites II, III and IV of the viral genome have been published previously [30]. The expected sizes of the amplification products are 354, 447, and 502 bp for wildtype virus deletion sites II to IV, and 1285 for deletion site III in MVA-CR19.GFP. Thermocycling was initiated with 94°C for 80 s, followed by 35 cycles of 94°C for 20 s, 55°C for 20 s and 72°C for 90 s, and terminated with 72°C for 5 min. Amplicons were separated by electrophoreses in 1.5% agarose gels.

Productivity indicators of the cultivation systems

The productivity of batch, semi-continuous and continuous cultivation systems was determined based on two parameters: time yield (TY) and space-time yield (STY). The following equations were used for all three cultivation modes: (6) (7) Where tn is the total operational time (initial batch phase plus virus production phase for semi-continuous and continuous), is the TCID50 of a harvest at time tn (if no harvest is taken at time tn its value is zero), and is the harvest volume collected at time tn. Eqs 6 and 7 were also used for estimating the productivity of a hypothetical batch process consisting of two parallel 645 mL bioreactors (8 d batch cycle). Considering possible mass transfer limitations for larger scales, the (maximum) productivity of a hypothetical batch cultivation was estimated using virus titers obtained in small-scale cultivations, i.e. the titers of BM-A, BM-B, and BM-C shown in Table 1. This hypothetical system was chosen as a comparison to the TSB system, because it represents the alternative given up when the decision of operating both vessels in continuous mode is taken (opportunity cost). From here onward this hypothetical process is referred as the batch process.

thumbnail
Table 1. Overview of the process parameters, virus titers and yields obtained in batch, semi-continuous, and continuous experiments.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182553.t001

Results and discussion

Batch cultivations

MVA virus titers and productivity in batch.

Cells were seeded in shaker flasks at a concentration of 0.8×106 cells/mL and grew in batch mode for 3–4 d until 5.0×106 cells/mL were reached. For the MVA-CR19 virus strain used for infection, TCID50 titers of 3.0×108, 1.0×108 and 0.3×108 virions/mL were obtained at 72 h post infection, as summarized in Table 1 (experiments BM-A, B and C). Based on the average TCID50 titer of 1.4×108 virions/mL at time of harvest (toh; defined as the time with the highest virus titer), the productivity of the hypothetical batch process (see productivity indicators section) was determined as 8.9×108 virions/h (TYB) and 3.4×108 virions/(L h) (STYB) for 17 d of operation (2 batch cycles). For 26 d of operation (3 batch cycles) this corresponds to 8.7×108 virions/h and 2.2×108 virions/(L h) for TY and STY, respectively (Table 1).

MVA-CR19 virus titers obtained in these 50 mL batch experiments were similar to those previously described for MVA wild type virus replicated in AGE1.CR and AGE1.CR.pIX cells [31]. In particular, these experiments confirmed that the new genotype MVA-CR19 efficiently replicates in single cells and does not require cell agglomeration at the time of infection [24]. Taking into account the initial batch phase of the continuous experiment T25 (Fig 2A), where cell concentrations up to 5×106 cells/mL were achieved in a 1 L bioreactor in batch mode, it should also be possible to obtain high virus titers at larger batch volumes.

thumbnail
Fig 2. Semi-continuous propagation of MVA-CR19 virus in a two-stage system using shaker flasks (only one representative cultivation shown; experiment SM25-A, Table 1.

A) Concentration of viable AGE1.CR.pIX cells in SCB (circles) and SVB (squares). B) Viability (white) and pH value (grey) of SCB (circles) and SVB (squares). C) Concentration of glucose (white) and lactate (grey) in SCB (circles) and SVB (squares). D) MVA TICD50 titers of SM25-A; the dashed line represents the time of infection. The first harvest was carried out 12 h post infection. SCB and SVB, small-cell and virus bioreactors.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182553.g002

Semi-continuous cultivation

Cells and MVA virus propagation in the semi-continuous system.

To start the cultivation, AGE1.CR.pIX cells were seeded at a concentration of 0.8×106 cells/mL in SCB and SVB and maintained in batch mode for 3–4 d. Results of one representative cultivation are shown in Fig 2A, 2B, 2C and 2D (experiment SM25-A, Table 1). After the initial batch phase, medium replacements at regular intervals were initiated (12–15 h) and a semi-continuous steady-state was successfully obtained for at least 2 weeks. Viable cell concentrations in the SCB fluctuated in a range of 8–12×106 cells/mL with viabilities above 90% (Fig 2B). No limitation of glucose was observed, and levels of lactate were about 20 mmol/L, as shown in Fig 2C.

SVB was infected with MVA virus after 3–4 d of batch growth, and the semi-continuous mode with harvesting was started 12 h p.i. The cell concentration initially also fluctuated in a similar range as for the SCB, but then fluctuations decreased as a consequence of progressing virus replication. Cell viabilities of 90% or more were observed in SVB for the first days, but dropped after 12 d (Fig 2B). The virus titers increased for about 4–5 d before a stationary phase was achieved (Fig 2D). Final TCID50 values between 1×107−1×109 virions/mL, were obtained that are similar to those of batch cultivations and published data [24, 31]. In contrast to influenza A virus cultivations in continuous cultures, which oscillated by 6 orders of magnitude [6], only a low level of random fluctuations in MVA-CR19 titers were observed that did not exceed two orders of magnitude. For example, SM25-A (grey squares, Fig 2D) oscillated between 1×107−1×109 virions/mL. Taking into account the results obtained for MVA-CR19.GFP stability (see following sections), these oscillations are most likely due to variations in the cell concentration in the SVB and measurement errors of virus titrations.

Impact of process parameters on MVA virus yields: Residence time and addition of fresh medium in the virus bioreactor.

To evaluate if the virus yields can be increased by changing the residence time, SSC experiments with 25, 35 and 64 h RT in the SVB were carried out (Fig 3). The moi of 0.05, used in all experiments, led to initial virus concentrations of 0.1–1.0×105 virions/mL. The TCID50 titers showed the typical pattern of virus replication, an initial increase followed by a stationary phase. Depending on the RT in the SVB, the increase in virus titers differed significantly. With the lowest RT (SM25-B, 25 h), the increase was fast and high titers were achieved within 2 d (≥1×108 virions/mL, Fig 3). Surprisingly, virus increase was delayed with higher RT (SM35-B and SM64, 35 and 64 h). Nevertheless, for both cultivations final virus titers in the order of 1×108 virions/mL were obtained.

thumbnail
Fig 3. Semi-continuous propagation of MVA-CR19 virus at three different residence times (25, 35 and 64 h) in the virus vessel (SVB).

MVA TCID50 titers of the semi-continuous experiments (squares) SM25-B (25 h, white), SM35-A 35 h, grey with +), SM35-B (35 h, black), and SM64 (64 h, grey). One semi-continuous experiment, SM35-C (white-circles), was carried out without medium replacement in the SVB.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182553.g003

Also, to test whether high virus yields can be obtained by reducing the amount of fresh medium added to SVB, one experiment was performed without the addition of fresh medium into the virus vessel (SM35-C; Table 1, Fig 3). With fluctuations in TCID50 titers not exceeding 1×105 virions/mL, this cultivation resulted in the lowest virus titers among all experiments. This is in agreement with previous studies (performed with influenza A virus, however) which showed that addition of fresh medium at time of infection is usually required for obtaining high virus yields in batch processes [32]. Despite the differences during the initial increase in virus titers (8–10 d), all SSC cultivations achieved comparable maximum TCID50 titers in the stationary phase with fluctuations of less than 2 log units. Taking additionally into account the results of the SSC cultivations, a RT of 25 h was therefore used to scale up the virus bioreactor in the continuous cultivation.

Productivity of the semi-continuous experiments.

As a general tendency, a higher productivity was obtained for experiments with lower RT in SVB. The TY was 1.0×109, 4.1×108, and 2.0×108 virions/h for the experiments SM25-B, SM-35-B and SM64, respectively (Table 1). The best STY was 1.0×109, 3.6×108, and 1.8×108 virions/(L h) for experiments SM25-B, SM-35-B and SM64, respectively. These values were in the same order of magnitude as the batch process operated 8 d (5.2×108 virions/(L h), 1 cycle) and 16 d (2.5×108 virions/(L h), 2 batch cycles), respectively. Accordingly, the productivity for SSC systems is similar or better than for batch processes. It has to be taken into account, however, that a batch process is more efficient than SSC for low volume MVA vaccine production (single batch campaigns).

Analysis of MVA-CR19.GFP virus stability in semi-continuous cultivations at 25 h and 40 h of residence time.

In order to investigate the genetic stability of the MVA virus over extended cultivation periods (i.e. the risk to lose the recombinant GFP protein), the MVA-CR19.GFP virus was propagated for 16 d in SSC, and the TCID50 as well as the GFP-derived TCID50 were determined (25 h RT, Fig 4A; 40 h RT, Fig 4D). For both RT experiments, the time course and the absolute values of both TCID50 titers were similar over the whole cultivation period. At 25 h RT, a Ratio-TCID50 of 1.4 and 2.0 was obtained for the first and the last harvest, respectively (Fig 4B and 4C). At 40 h RT, the ratios were 1.6 and 1.0, respectively (Fig 4E and 4F). Considering that the error range of the TCID50 assay is a least 0.3 log units due to the dilution steps chosen for titrations, this variation is not significant. The Ratio-TCID50 of 1.0 and 2.0 after 16 d of culture in both RT experiments suggests that the MVA virus is genetically stable. Interestingly, the MVA-CR19.GFP virus titers were higher for a RT of 40 h rather than 25 h. One potential explanation may be that the incorporation of a recombinant insert may have slightly prolonged the virus replication cycle so that 25 h RT may be too short for efficient propagation in the SVB.

thumbnail
Fig 4. Genetic stability analysis of MVA-CR19.GFP virus for 16 d of semi-continuous cultivation.

Two different RT in SVB were analyzed. Fig A, B and C correspond to experiment SG25 (25 h RT in SVB) and Fig D, E, and F to experiment SG40 (40 h RT in SVB). A) TCID50 (red) and GFP-derived TCID50 (green). B) TCID50 (red) and GFP-derived TCID50 (green) at 0 d p.i. C) TCID50 (red) and GFP-derived TCID50 (green) at 16 d p.i. D) TCID50 (red) and GFP-derived TCID50 (green). E) CID50 (red) and GFP-derived TCID50 (green) at 0 d p.i. F) TCID50 (red) and GFP-derived TCID50 (green) at 16 d p.i. Error bars: mean and standard deviation of three technical replicates. G) PCR analysis of the deletion segments 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 (Del 2–6) of MVA-CR19.GFP virus, and DNA ladder in the range of 100–2000 bp (M). The first and last harvest of experiments SG25 (two boxes on the left side) and SG40 (two boxes on the right side) were analyzed.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182553.g004

In addition, the genetic stability of MVA-CR19.GFP virus was analyzed using PCR of the first and last harvest of both SSC cultivations. For the two RT experiments, the GFP insertion cassette amplified by this method was visible in the deletion segment 3 (Del 3) of the first (0 d p.i.) and last harvest (16 d p.i.) with a size of 1428 kbp (Fig 4G). The fact that this band was visible in the first and last harvests, and that no smaller gene fragments where detected in this cultivation, supports the finding regarding the genetic stability of MVA-CR19.GFP discussed above. For longer cultivations and for the production of other recombinant antigens, these results have to be confirmed. In general, however, MVA-CR19 seems to be an excellent candidate for continuous viral vector production.

Continuous cultivations

Cell and MVA virus propagation in the continuous bioreactor.

The continuous bioreactor system (experiment T25, Table 1) was successfully operated for 30 d, as shown in Fig 5. During the startup of the process (-12 d to -8 d), the cell concentration in the CB reached values of 5.0×106 cells/mL in batch operation with cell viabilities well above 90% (Fig 5A and 5B), and μmax of 0.0150 h-1. Both, the maximum cell concentrations and the μmax are in accordance with results reported previously by Lohr et al (2009). Immediately before the continuous culture was initiated, a concentration of about 2.5×106 cells/mL was reached in both vessels by 1:1 dilution with fresh medium. Once the continuous operation was started, the cell concentration in the CB increased initially to 5.0×106 cells/mL, and finally decreased to 3.0×106 cells/mL with 85% viability. Nevertheless, cells could be maintained stable at these viabilities for the rest of the experiment. Also, the continuous process was maintained without infection of VB for the next 8 d (-7 d to 0 d p.i., Fig 5A), in order to evaluate cell growth in the second vessel. Finally, the cells concentration in the VB reached up to 9.0×106 cells/mL, well above the anticipated 5.0×106 cells/mL of CB. One possible explanation is that the dip tube of the VB, used to extract the harvest, might have acted as a settler as it had a relatively low withdrawal rate and a high internal diameter as reported previously [33]. Achieving high cell concentrations, the glucose concentration in the VB dropped to about 10 mmol/L (Fig 5C). Therefore the 50% of medium of the VB was exchanged before infection with MVA-CR19 virus. After the infection (moi 0.05), the cell concentration and the viability in VB decreased to 5.0×106 cells/mL and 70%, respectively, as expected from the SSC experiments described above. After three days of continuous cultivation, the TCID50 reached values close to 1.0×108 virions/mL, and a stable MVA production was maintained for 18 d p.i. with a maximum titer of 6.0×108 virions/mL, very similar to batch cultivations [31]. A total number of 6.0×1011 virions were collected from the harvest, with a total production volume of 7.1 L, which corresponds to an average TCID50 of 9×107 virions/mL (also see data for T25 in Table 1). As before, the virus titers fluctuated in a range not larger than 1 log unit (see SSC experiments). This low level of fluctuations of infectious titers over process time together with the observed genomic stability of MVA-CR19.GFP suggests that interference by defective particles [34, 35] is not a phenomenon that limits continuous MVA replication.

thumbnail
Fig 5. Continuous cultivation of MVA-CR19 virus in a two-stage stirred tank bioreactor (TSB) system.

Data of CB (circles) and VB (squares) are shown. A) Viable cell concentration. B) Cell viability. C) pH value. D) Concentration of glucose. E) Concentration of lactate. F) TCID50 titers of MVA-CR19 virus in VB (grey squares) and in the harvest (white triangles). The dotted-dashed vertical line at -7 h p.i. represents the start of the continuous culture in both vessels. The dashed line at 0 d p.i. represents the time of infection of VB.CB and VB, cell and virus bioreactors.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182553.g005

In Fig 5D, the time course of the TCID50 of the VB and the harvest bottle are depicted. Note that, while the TCID50 of VB represents the virus concentration in the vessel at a given time point, the TICD50 of the harvest represents the value that results from accumulating virus production over a period of 8–12 h. During this time period, part of the MVA virus could be inactivated by host cell hydrolases released to the supernatant. Thus, the slightly lower TCID50 titers obtained in the harvest compared to the VB might be closer to the real TCID50 that will be obtained in a continuous process with a harvest bottle connected to the VB.

Interestingly, the TSB results resembles some of the results obtained with the semi-continuous cultivation system. Experiments SM25-A and SM25-B were performed with a RT in SVB identical to the VB of the TSB system. Virus titers from SM25-A (Fig 2D) showed a similar pattern as the values of the TSB system (Fig 5F) from day 4 p.i. onwards, reaching similar final titers. The second experiment, SM25-B (white squares, Fig 3), was even closer to the virus dynamics obtained with the TSB system because the harvest volume was correctly calculated using Eq 4 (a wrong calculation of the first harvest volume of SM25-A diluted the virus below 1×105 virus/mL between 0–4 d p.i.). This confirms that SSC could serve as a scale-down model of the TSB system, and is in line with previous work performed by Van Lier et al. who have demonstrated for baculovirus A. californica that semi-continuous cultivations can approximate continuous two-stage cultures [27]. In addition, it confirms studies regarding the use of simple non-instrumented batch and semi-continuous cultures for the design and optimization of continuous animal cell cultures [26]. Overall, our results show that these concepts can even be applied for two-stage virus cultivations systems using shaker flasks.

Productivity of the continuous process.

The TY of the TSB system was 1.2×109 virions/h, and the STY was 1.7×108 virions/(L h) for a total of 21.7 d of operation (17.7 d of virus propagation). The time course of TY and STY over the production time is shown in Fig 6A and 6B. As a comparison, data of an hypothetical batch process (107 virions/mL and 108 virions/mL at toh) are also included. This figure shows that both the TY and the STY of the TSB started below the productivity of a batch. After 7 days, the productivity of the TSB approached the batch process and remained constant. In other words, the TSB system can be equally or more efficient than a batch production system, if more than two batch-cycles are performed (see detail in Table 1).

thumbnail
Fig 6. Productivity of the two-stage stirred tank bioreactor (TSB) system (1290 mL wv; 0.29 mL/min) compared with a hypothetical batch process (645 mL each vessel, 1290 mL wv).

A) TY of the continuous cultivation based on TCID50 values by sampling the VB (squares) and the harvest vessel (circles), versus TY of the batch process (dashed lines; upper and lower lines estimated, assuming a maximum TCID50 at time of harvest of 1×108 and 1×107 virions/mL, respectively). B) STY of the continuous cultivation compared to the batch process (same symbols as in Fig A). It is further assumed that the cell growth phase of the batch and the continuous cultivation were identical, and that both vessels of the batch process were harvested at day 3 and day 12 post infection. TY, time yield; STY, space-time yield; VB, virus bioreactor.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182553.g006

Conclusions

Continuous and semi-continuous production of MVA virus was evaluated and compared against batch cultivations using MVA-CR19 and MVA-CR19.GFP virus isolates that allow efficient replication in non-agglomerated avian AGE1.CR.pIX suspension cells. A small-scale approach, using a two-stage semi-continuous cultivation (SSC) system, was used to support the establishment of a two-stage continuous stirred tank bioreactor (TSB) system that showed stable production of cells over 2–3 weeks of cultivation.

A higher residence time in the SSC system resulted in a higher delay before virus titers increased, but had little impact on the final titers of the MVA-CR19 isolate in the stationary phase. A critical parameter for high yields appears to be the incorporation of a stream of fresh medium in the virus bioreactor, to remove spent medium including compounds inhibiting virus replication and to avoid limitation of cell-relevant metabolites during virus replication.

Evaluation of continuous production of MVA was facilitated with the SSC system because high virus titers were obtained throughout the process interval without oscillations of infectious units at different residence times. The stable titers suggest that a “von Magnus effect” due to formation of DIPs is highly unlikely for MVA. This observation is also consistent with the results from assays for maintenance of recombinant inserts by titration against the fluorescence GFP transgene and by PCR analysis. These assays demonstrated that MVA is stable for at least 16 d of continuous production.

A scale up to a TSB system for MVA-CR19 virus propagation was successful and showed high TCID50 titers, again with only small random fluctuations over 18 d of virus production and with productivity indicators comparable to repeated-batch cultivations. However, titers appeared to be lower for the recombinant virus that expresses GFP if the RT was only 25 h. This observation may indicate that MVA-CR19.GFP may have longer replication cycles under the chosen conditions and that the RT has to be adjusted accordingly for scale-up.

Overall, our results demonstrate that at least some recombinant MVA virus strains can be stably and efficiently propagated in TSB systems designed for continuous and semi-continuous production of MVA-based recombinant vaccines and viral vectors.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Deborah Horn for excellent technical support.

Author Contributions

  1. Conceptualization: YG UR FT.
  2. Data curation: FT.
  3. Formal analysis: FT.
  4. Funding acquisition: UR.
  5. Investigation: FT.
  6. Methodology: FT.
  7. Project administration: YG UR.
  8. Resources: IJ.
  9. Software: FT.
  10. Supervision: YG UR.
  11. Validation: FT.
  12. Visualization: FT.
  13. Writing – original draft: FT.
  14. Writing – review & editing: FT IJ YG UR.

References

  1. 1. Walther J, Godawat R, Hwang C, Abe Y, Sinclair A, Konstantinov K. The business impact of an integrated continuous biomanufacturing platform for recombinant protein production. Journal of biotechnology. 2015;213:3–12. pmid:26014522.
  2. 2. Konstantinov KB, Cooney CL. White paper on continuous bioprocessing. May 20–21, 2014 Continuous Manufacturing Symposium. J Pharm Sci. 2015;104(3):813–20. pmid:25417595.
  3. 3. deGooijer CD, Bakker WAM, Beeftink HH, Tramper J. Bioreactors in series: An overview of design procedures and practical applications. Enzyme Microb Tech. 1996;18(3):202–19.
  4. 4. Gori GB. Continuous Cultivation of Virus in Cell Suspensions by Use of Lysostat. Appl Microbiol. 1965;13(6):909–17. pmid:4286249
  5. 5. van Lier FL, van den End EJ, de Gooijer CD, Vlak JM, Tramper J. Continuous production of baculovirus in a cascade of insect-cell reactors. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 1990;33(1):43–7. pmid:1366563.
  6. 6. Frensing T, Heldt FS, Pflugmacher A, Behrendt I, Jordan I, Flockerzi D, et al. Continuous influenza virus production in cell culture shows a periodic accumulation of defective interfering particles. PLoS One. 2013;8(9):e72288. pmid:24039749; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC3764112.
  7. 7. Frensing T. Defective interfering viruses and their impact on vaccines and viral vectors. Biotechnol J. 2015;10(5):681–9. pmid:25728309.
  8. 8. Tapia F, Vazquez-Ramirez D, Genzel Y, Reichl U. Bioreactors for high cell density and continuous multi-stage cultivations: options for process intensification in cell culture-based viral vaccine production. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2016;100(5):2121–32. pmid:26758296; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC4756030.
  9. 9. Verheust C, Goossens M, Pauwels K, Breyer D. Biosafety aspects of modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA)-based vectors used for gene therapy or vaccination. Vaccine. 2012;30(16):2623–32. pmid:22342706.
  10. 10. Kreijtz JH, Wiersma LC, De Gruyter HL, Vogelzang-van Trierum SE, van Amerongen G, Stittelaar KJ, et al. A single immunization with modified vaccinia virus Ankara-based influenza virus H7 vaccine affords protection in the influenza A(H7N9) pneumonia ferret model. J Infect Dis. 2015;211(5):791–800. pmid:25246535; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC4402375.
  11. 11. Milligan ID, Gibani MM, Sewell R, Clutterbuck EA, Campbell D, Plested E, et al. Safety and Immunogenicity of Novel Adenovirus Type 26- and Modified Vaccinia Ankara-Vectored Ebola Vaccines: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. 2016;315(15):1610–23. pmid:27092831.
  12. 12. Ewer K, Rampling T, Venkatraman N, Bowyer G, Wright D, Lambe T, et al. A Monovalent Chimpanzee Adenovirus Ebola Vaccine Boosted with MVA. N Engl J Med. 2016;374(17):1635–46. pmid:25629663.
  13. 13. Vijayan A, Garcia-Arriaza J, Raman SC, Conesa JJ, Chichon FJ, Santiago C, et al. A Chimeric HIV-1 gp120 Fused with Vaccinia Virus 14K (A27) Protein as an HIV Immunogen. PLoS One. 2015;10(7):e0133595. pmid:26208356; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC4514760.
  14. 14. Leung-Theung-Long S, Gouanvic M, Coupet CA, Ray A, Tupin E, Silvestre N, et al. A Novel MVA-Based Multiphasic Vaccine for Prevention or Treatment of Tuberculosis Induces Broad and Multifunctional Cell-Mediated Immunity in Mice and Primates. PLoS One. 2015;10(11):e0143552. pmid:26599077; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC4658014.
  15. 15. Weber C, Buchner SM, Schnierle BS. A small antigenic determinant of the Chikungunya virus E2 protein is sufficient to induce neutralizing antibodies which are partially protective in mice. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2015;9(4):e0003684. pmid:25905779; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC4407984.
  16. 16. Zitzmann-Roth EM, von Sonnenburg F, de la Motte S, Arndtz-Wiedemann N, von Krempelhuber A, Uebler N, et al. Cardiac safety of Modified Vaccinia Ankara for vaccination against smallpox in a young, healthy study population. PLoS One. 2015;10(4):e0122653. pmid:25879867; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC4399887.
  17. 17. Green CA, Scarselli E, Sande CJ, Thompson AJ, de Lara CM, Taylor KS, et al. Chimpanzee adenovirus- and MVA-vectored respiratory syncytial virus vaccine is safe and immunogenic in adults. Sci Transl Med. 2015;7(300):300ra126. pmid:26268313; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC4669850.
  18. 18. Dunachie S, Berthoud T, Hill AV, Fletcher HA. Transcriptional changes induced by candidate malaria vaccines and correlation with protection against malaria in a human challenge model. Vaccine. 2015;33(40):5321–31. pmid:26256523; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC4582771.
  19. 19. Sebastian S, Gilbert SC. Recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara-based malaria vaccines. Expert Rev Vaccines. 2016;15(1):91–103. pmid:26511884.
  20. 20. Marin-Lopez A, Ortego J. Generation of Recombinant Modified Vaccinia Virus Ankara Encoding VP2, NS1, and VP7 Proteins of Bluetongue Virus. Methods Mol Biol. 2016;1349:137–50. pmid:26458834.
  21. 21. Volz A, Lim S, Kaserer M, Lulf A, Marr L, Jany S, et al. Immunogenicity and protective efficacy of recombinant Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara candidate vaccines delivering West Nile virus envelope antigens. Vaccine. 2016;34(16):1915–26. pmid:26939903.
  22. 22. Jaramillo Ortiz JM, Del Medico Zajac MP, Zanetti FA, Molinari MP, Gravisaco MJ, Calamante G, et al. Vaccine strategies against Babesia bovis based on prime-boost immunizations in mice with modified vaccinia Ankara vector and recombinant proteins. Vaccine. 2014;32(36):4625–32. pmid:24968152.
  23. 23. Jordan I, Northoff S, Thiele M, Hartmann S, Horn D, Howing K, et al. A chemically defined production process for highly attenuated poxviruses. Biologicals. 2011;39(1):50–8. pmid:21237672.
  24. 24. Jordan I, Horn D, John K, Sandig V. A genotype of modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA) that facilitates replication in suspension cultures in chemically defined medium. Viruses. 2013;5(1):321–39. pmid:23337383; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC3564123.
  25. 25. Westgate PJ, Emery AH. Approximation of continuous fermentation by semicontinuous cultures. Biotechnol Bioeng. 1990;35(5):437–53. pmid:18592537.
  26. 26. Henry O, Kwok E, Piret JM. Simpler noninstrumented batch and semicontinuous cultures provide mammalian cell kinetic data comparable to continuous and perfusion cultures. Biotechnol Prog. 2008;24(4):921–31. pmid:19194901.
  27. 27. vanLier FLJ, vandenHombergh JPTW, deGooijer CD, denBoer MM, Vlak JM, Tramper J. Long-term semi-continuous production of recombinant baculovirus protein in a repeated (fed-)batch two-stage reactor system. Enzyme Microb Tech. 1996;18(6):460–6.
  28. 28. Lohr V. Characterization of the avian designer cells AGE1.CR and AGE1.CR.pIX considering growth, metabolism and production of influenza virus and Modified Vaccinia Virus Ankara (MVA). PhD Thesis: Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg; 2014.
  29. 29. Jordan I, Vos A, Beilfuss S, Neubert A, Breul S, Sandig V. An avian cell line designed for production of highly attenuated viruses. Vaccine. 2009;27(5):748–56. pmid:19071186.
  30. 30. Kremer M, Volz A, Kreijtz JH, Fux R, Lehmann MH, Sutter G. Easy and efficient protocols for working with recombinant vaccinia virus MVA. Methods Mol Biol. 2012;890:59–92. pmid:22688761.
  31. 31. Lohr V, Rath A, Genzel Y, Jordan I, Sandig V, Reichl U. New avian suspension cell lines provide production of influenza virus and MVA in serum-free media: studies on growth, metabolism and virus propagation. Vaccine. 2009;27(36):4975–82. pmid:19531390.
  32. 32. Genzel Y, Olmer RM, Schafer B, Reichl U. Wave microcarrier cultivation of MDCK cells for influenza virus production in serum containing and serum-free media. Vaccine. 2006;24(35–36):6074–87. pmid:16781022.
  33. 33. Batt BC, Davis RH, Kompala DS. Inclined sedimentation for selective retention of viable hybridomas in a continuous suspension bioreactor. Biotechnol Prog. 1990;6(6):458–64. pmid:1366836.
  34. 34. Moyer RW, Rothe CT. The white pock mutants of rabbit poxvirus. I. Spontaneous host range mutants contain deletions. Virology. 1980;102(1):119–32. pmid:6245500.
  35. 35. Moss B, Winters E, Cooper N. Instability and reiteration of DNA sequences within the vaccinia virus genome. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1981;78(3):1614–8. pmid:6262819; PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC319182.