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1.
Biomicrofluidics ; 18(1): 011302, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38268742

ABSTRACT

In recent years, cell-based therapies have transformed medical treatment. These therapies present a multitude of challenges associated with identifying the mechanism of action, developing accurate safety and potency assays, and achieving low-cost product manufacturing at scale. The complexity of the problem can be attributed to the intricate composition of the therapeutic products: living cells with complex biochemical compositions. Identifying and measuring critical quality attributes (CQAs) that impact therapy success is crucial for both the therapy development and its manufacturing. Unfortunately, current analytical methods and tools for identifying and measuring CQAs are limited in both scope and speed. This Perspective explores the potential for microfluidic-enabled mass spectrometry (MS) systems to comprehensively characterize CQAs for cell-based therapies, focusing on secretome, intracellular metabolome, and surfaceome biomarkers. Powerful microfluidic sampling and processing platforms have been recently presented for the secretome and intracellular metabolome, which could be implemented with MS for fast, locally sampled screening of the cell culture. However, surfaceome analysis remains limited by the lack of rapid isolation and enrichment methods. Developing innovative microfluidic approaches for surface marker analysis and integrating them with secretome and metabolome measurements using a common analytical platform hold the promise of enhancing our understanding of CQAs across all "omes," potentially revolutionizing cell-based therapy development and manufacturing for improved efficacy and patient accessibility.

2.
Cytotherapy ; 25(9): 1006-1015, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37061898

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AIMS: In-process monitoring and control of biomanufacturing workflows remains a significant challenge in the development, production, and application of cell therapies. New process analytical technologies must be developed to identify and control the critical process parameters that govern ex vivo cell growth and differentiation to ensure consistent and predictable safety, efficacy, and potency of clinical products. METHODS: This study demonstrates a new platform for at-line intracellular analysis of T-cells. Untargeted mass spectrometry analyses via the platform are correlated to conventional methods of T-cell assessment. RESULTS: Spectral markers and metabolic pathways correlated with T-cell activation and differentiation are detected at early time points via rapid, label-free metabolic measurements from a minimal number of cells as enabled by the platform. This is achieved while reducing the analytical time and resources as compared to conventional methods of T-cell assessment. CONCLUSIONS: In addition to opportunities for fundamental insight into the dynamics of T-cell processes, this work highlights the potential of in-process monitoring and dynamic feedback control strategies via metabolic modulation to drive T-cell activation, proliferation, and differentiation throughout biomanufacturing.


Subject(s)
Metabolic Networks and Pathways , T-Lymphocytes , Mass Spectrometry , Cell Differentiation , Cell Proliferation
3.
Lab Chip ; 21(23): 4696-4706, 2021 11 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34751694

ABSTRACT

Real-time, advanced diagnostics of the biochemical state within cells remains a significant challenge for research and development, production, and application of cell-based therapies. The fundamental biochemical processes and mechanisms of action of such advanced therapies are still largely unknown, including the critical quality attributes that correlate to therapeutic function, performance, and potency and the critical process parameters that impact quality throughout cell therapy manufacturing. An integrated microfluidic platform has been developed for in-line analysis of a small number of cells via direct infusion nano-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Central to this platform is a microfabricated cell processing device that prepares cells from limited sample volumes removed directly from cell culture systems. The sample-to-analysis workflow overcomes the labor intensive, time-consuming, and destructive nature of existing mass spectrometry approaches for analysis of cells. By providing rapid, high-throughput analyses of the intracellular state, this platform enables untargeted discovery of critical quality attributes and their real-time, in-process monitoring.


Subject(s)
Microfluidics , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization
4.
Biotechnol J ; 16(3): e2000277, 2021 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32975016

ABSTRACT

Nascent advanced therapies, including regenerative medicine and cell and gene therapies, rely on the production of cells in bioreactors that are highly heterogeneous in both space and time. Unfortunately, advanced therapies have failed to reach a wide patient population due to unreliable manufacturing processes that result in batch variability and cost prohibitive production. This can be attributed largely to a void in existing process analytical technologies (PATs) capable of characterizing the secreted critical quality attribute (CQA) biomolecules that correlate with the final product quality. The Dynamic Sampling Platform (DSP) is a PAT for cell bioreactor monitoring that can be coupled to a suite of sensor techniques to provide real-time feedback on spatial and temporal CQA content in situ. In this study, DSP is coupled with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and direct-from-culture sampling to obtain measures of CQA content in bulk media and the cell microenvironment throughout the entire cell culture process (≈3 weeks). Post hoc analysis of this real-time data reveals that sampling from the microenvironment enables cell state monitoring (e.g., confluence, differentiation). These results demonstrate that an effective PAT should incorporate both spatial and temporal resolution to serve as an effective input for feedback control in biomanufacturing.


Subject(s)
Bioreactors , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization , Cell Culture Techniques , Culture Media , Humans
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