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Cascaded processing enables continuous upstream processing with E. coli BL21(DE3).


ABSTRACT: In many industrial sectors continuous processing is already the golden standard to maximize productivity. However, when working with living cells, subpopulation formation causes instabilities in long-term cultivations. In cascaded continuous cultivation, biomass formation and recombinant protein expression can be spatially separated. This cultivation mode was found to facilitate stable protein expression using microbial hosts, however mechanistic knowledge of this cultivation strategy is scarce. In this contribution we present a method workflow to reduce workload and accelerate the establishment of stable continuous processes with E. coli BL21(DE3) exclusively based on bioengineering methods.

SUBMITTER: Kittler S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8169658 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Cascaded processing enables continuous upstream processing with E. coli BL21(DE3).

Kittler Stefan S   Slouka Christoph C   Pell Andreas A   Lamplot Roman R   Besleaga Mihail M   Ablasser Sarah S   Herwig Christoph C   Spadiut Oliver O   Kopp Julian J  

Scientific reports 20210601 1


In many industrial sectors continuous processing is already the golden standard to maximize productivity. However, when working with living cells, subpopulation formation causes instabilities in long-term cultivations. In cascaded continuous cultivation, biomass formation and recombinant protein expression can be spatially separated. This cultivation mode was found to facilitate stable protein expression using microbial hosts, however mechanistic knowledge of this cultivation strategy is scarce.  ...[more]

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2017-01-13 | GSE93565 | GEO