SBIR-STTR Award

Novel Hollow-Fiber Bioreactor with Integral Oxygenation
Award last edited on: 5/15/20

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIGMS
Total Award Amount
$549,845
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Bruce Paul Amiot

Company Information

BioVest International Inc (AKA: Endotronics Inc~Cellex Biosciences Inc)

8500 Evergreen Boulevard Nw
Minneapolis, MN 55433
   (763) 786-0302
   investor@biovest.com
   www.biovest.com
Location: Multiple
Congr. District: 03
County: Anoka

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43GM043633-01
Start Date: 9/30/93    Completed: 9/30/95
Phase I year
1989
Phase I Amount
$49,845
Recombinant research has facilitated the in vitro production of mammalian cell-secreted products. These products are used in the in vitro and in vivo diagnostic and therapeutic setting. Products that have been approved or are in the approval process have projected market needs on the order of 100 kilograms per year, but large quantities like this will be difficult to produce using today's state-of-the-art cell culture methods. A new hollow-fiber bioreactor has been developed that can meet these production needs in a cost-effective manner. The device has all of the advantages of hollow-fiber cell culture: high cell density, low culture volumes, high product concentration and purity, low serum/growth factor requirement, and compact size. The bioreactor is a novel design that is easily manufactured without large investments in capital equipment and is linearly scalable. The device can transfer oxygen at a rate of 196 mM/hour/liter.The Phase I research objective is to generate the data required to optimize the design of the commercial bioreactor. This bioreactor will allow very large-scale mammalian cell culturing with less space and reduced equipment costs than current cell culture methods. This research will lead to Phase II development of the bioreactor and lay the groundwork for improved cell-culture instrumentation development.

Anticipated Results:
Therapeutic and diagnostic applications of mammalian cell-secreted proteins have created a large demand for improved in vitro production methods. Phase I research will improve existing large-scale cell culture methodology. This development will reduce production costs through increased productivity and reduced raw material and downstream purification costs. Thus, several proteins (e.g., human insulin, interferon, and tPA) will become less expensive and more available.National Institute Of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)

Phase II

Contract Number: 9R44CA062660-02
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
1993
(last award dollars: 1995)
Phase II Amount
$500,000

The objective of this Phase II project is to further develop a newly designed hollow fiber bioreactor. The applicant claims the bioreactor can support five times more viable mammalian cells/ml than existing hollow fiber bioreactors. The phase I project demonstrated that a bioreactor constructed with an internal oxygenation membrane can support mammalian cells in culture. The Phase II project would complete the design of the bioreactor and generate the data required to design and develop a series of mammalian cell culture systems based on this concept. The Phase III plan is to commercialize a series of instruments, from small bench-top scale to large scale production systems, that would meet the needs of the diagnostic and therapeutic protein manufacturers. The Phase II project has two major areas of research: The design and development of a spirally-wrapped version of the new reactor's capabilities with respect to the growth of attachment dependent cells. For the former work a number of NMR imaging and spectroscopic techniques would be developed that would allow bioreactor performance to be evaluated non-invasively. The applicants states the NMR techniques may be widely applicable to other hollow fiber bioreactors and high cell density perfusion reactors.