화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biotechnology Progress, Vol.13, No.3, 311-317, 1997
Glycosylation of CHO-Derived Recombinant TPA Produced Under Elevated Pco(2)
Carbon dioxide is a metabolic byproduct of mammalian cell metabolism that can accumulate in poorly ventilated cultures. A buildup of CO2 at constant pH will be accompanied by an increase in medium osmolality. We have examined the glycosylation of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) produced under serum-free conditions by recombinant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells (MT2-1-8 cell line) in response to elevated pCO(2) at constant or elevated osmolality. The proportion of sialic acids comprising N-glycolylneuraminic acid decreased from 2.3-4.0% under 36 mmHg pCO(2) to 1.5-2.2% under 250 mmHg pCO(2). No changes were observed in the total sialic acid content, the content of other monosaccharides, the relative amounts of type I and type II tPAs, the distribution of surface charges, or the proportion of high-mannose oligosaccharides-even though these conditions have previously been shown to inhibit the specific growth rate of MT2-1-8 cells by 30-40% and the specific tPA production rate by as much as 40%. These results suggest robust glycosylation of tPA by CHO cells.