Litcius/Paper detail

Degradation Products of Tryptophan in Cell Culture Media: Contribution to Color and Toxicity

Alisa Schnellbaecher, Anton Lindig, Maxime Le Mignon, Tim Hofmann, Brit Pardon, Stephanie Bellmaine, Aline Zimmer

2021International Journal of Molecular Sciences14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Biomanufacturing processes may be optimized by storing cell culture media at room temperature, but this is currently limited by their instability and change in color upon long-term storage. This study demonstrates that one of the critical contributing factors toward media browning is tryptophan. LC-MS technology was utilized to identify tryptophan degradation products, which are likely formed primarily from oxidation reactions. Several of the identified compounds were shown to contribute significantly to color in solutions but also to exhibit toxicity against CHO cells. A cell-culture-compatible antioxidant, a-ketoglutaric acid, was found to be an efficient cell culture media additive for stabilizing components against degradation, inhibiting the browning of media formulations, and decreasing ammonia production, thus providing a viable method for developing room-temperature stable cell culture media.

Topics & Concepts

BrowningTryptophanToxicityChemistryDegradation (telecommunications)Cell cultureFood scienceChemically defined mediumBiochemistryOrganic chemistryBiologyIn vitroAmino acidComputer scienceGeneticsTelecommunicationsViral Infectious Diseases and Gene Expression in Insects3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchProtein purification and stability