Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.97, No.9, 3787-3800, 2013
Hosting the plant cells in vitro: recent trends in bioreactors
Biotechnological production of high-value metabolites and therapeutic proteins by plant in vitro systems has been considered as an attractive alternative of classical technologies. Numerous proof-of-concept studies have illustrated the feasibility of scaling up plant in vitro system-based processes while keeping their biosynthetic potential. Moreover, several commercial processes have been established so far. Though the progress on the field is still limited, in the recent years several bioreactor configurations has been developed (e.g., so-called single-use bioreactors) and successfully adapted for growing plant cells in vitro. This review highlights recent progress and limitations in the bioreactors for plant cells and outlines future perspectives for wider industrialization of plant in vitro systems as "green cell factories" for sustainable production of value-added molecules.
Keywords:Bioreactor design;Differentiated plant in vitro systems;Culture mode;Plant cell culture;Signal transduction engineering;Single-use bioreactors