1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is a bioreactor for seeding and culturing cells in a three-dimensional environment.
2. Background Art
There is increasing interest in studying cell function not in two-dimensional (2D) cultures (e.g., monolayers), but in three-dimensional (3D) environments (e.g., those provided by porous scaffolds). Cell culture in 3D scaffolds can also be useful in cellular therapy for the expansion of functional cells, and tissue engineering for the generation of implantable tissue structures. Intrinsic difficulties with 3D cultures in 3D scaffolds are (i) the uniform and efficient seeding of cells throughout the scaffold pores, and (ii) limited mass transfer to the cells in the central scaffold part. The present inventors have recently reported that perfusion of cell suspensions, and subsequently culture medium through the scaffold pores, is a possible solution for both issues (Wendt et al., Biotechnol. Bioeng. 84:215-214, 2003).
The present invention relates to the development of a bioreactor system, where the movement of a holder containing[z1] porous scaffolds generates perfusion of a cell suspension or culture medium through the same scaffolds in alternate directions. The holder could be fully made of porous scaffold material, thus maximizing utilization of the surface. In parallel, or prior to moving the holder, inside the vessel a stirring bar can be moved, so that cells can be cultured in suspension in the vessel with or without mixing.
This invention relates to a bioreactor for tissue engineering and a method of operating such a bioreactor.
A first preferred embodiment of the invention is a method for growing cells in culture, comprising the steps of providing a three-dimensional porous scaffold disposed in a culture chamber, the culture chamber comprising a space between a first end cap and a second end cap; providing one or more living cells; providing a liquid growth medium; and causing relative motion between the scaffold and at least one end cap, thereby moving the growth medium through the scaffold.
In a further preferred embodiment, the scaffold of the first embodiment may alternately be disposed in one of (1) an upper position out of said growth medium, or (2) a lower position in said growth medium; the method further comprising the steps, before the step of causing relative motion, of: growing said cells in a suspension in said growth medium while said scaffold is disposed in the upper position, and lowering said scaffold into the lower position.
In yet another preferred embodiment, during the reducing and expanding step of the method of the first embodiment, the scaffold moves in conjunction with one end cap.
In still another preferred embodiment, the culture chamber of the first embodiment further comprises connectors for flowing said growth medium in and out of said culture chamber.
In yet another preferred embodiment, the culture chamber of the first embodiment further comprises a stirrer bar.
Still another preferred embodiment includes a step, before the step of causing relative motion, of growing said cells in a suspension in said growth medium.
The second preferred embodiment of the invention is a bioreactor for growing cells in culture, comprising a culture chamber including a first end cap and a second end cap connected to define a space, and a holder configured to hold a porous, three-dimensional scaffold for growing or maintaining cells, wherein the holder is disposed between the end caps and is arranged so a reciprocating motion may occur between the holder and at least one of said end caps.
In yet another preferred embodiment, the holder in the bioreactor of the second preferred embodiment moves in conjunction with one end cap.
In still another preferred embodiment, the bioreactor of the second preferred embodiment further comprises a drive means operationally connected to actuate the reciprocating motion.
In yet another preferred embodiment, wherein the holder is integral with one of said end caps.
In still another preferred embodiment, when a porous scaffold is housed in said chamber for cell culture of the second embodiment, the scaffold may alternately be disposed in one of (1) an upper position out of a growth medium, or (2) a lower position in a growth medium.
In still another preferred embodiment, the culture chamber of the second embodiment further comprises connections disposed to permit flow of a growth medium in and out of said culture chamber.
In yet another preferred embodiment, the second embodiment further comprises a gas port connected to the culture chamber.
In still another preferred embodiment, the second embodiment further comprises a porous, three-dimensional scaffold for growing cells.
Still another preferred embodiment is any of the above-mentioned methods wherein the scaffold comprises a tissue (wherein tissue refers to both living tissues and devitalized/decellularized tissue, and equivalents).
Yet another preferred embodiment is any of the above-mentioned bioreactors wherein said scaffold comprises a tissue.
Still another preferred embodiment is a 3D culture of living cells produced by any of the above-mentioned methods.
Yet another preferred embodiment is the first-mentioned method embodiment, wherein the last step or a step following the last step comprises unidirectional perfusion of said medium through said scaffold.
Still another preferred embodiment is the bioreactor of the second embodiment, further comprising two ports for a growth media disposed so that, when the bioreactor houses a scaffold, the growth media is flowable through the ports and said scaffold in a unidirectional manner
Advantages of the present invention over existing perfusion bioreactors for cell culture include: (i) simple but highly flexible mode of operation, (ii) possibility of integrating the phases of suspension culture with subsequent perfusion through a scaffold in a closed system, and (iii) easy scale-up.
The present invention may be used for: (i) ‘easy-to-use’ bioreactors to support research of cell function in a 3D environment; (ii) bioreactors for the culture of cells in a 3D environment for an efficient expansion (e.g., hematopoietic progenitor cells) or for the specialized production of specific proteins (e.g., antibodies, enzymes, agonists, antagonists, hormones, drugs); (iii) bioreactors for the automated generation of 3D tissues for clinical implantation or extracorporeal life support (e.g., bioartificial liver assist device); and (iv) bioreactors for the maintenance or revitalization of tissue.
One advantage of 3D cell culture is that certain cells, for example stem cells, may exhibit enhanced properties (e.g., greater retention of progenitor traits) when grown in 3D as compared to conventional growth in a monolayer.
The bioreactor consists of one chamber (optionally containing a stirring bar where cells can be cultured in suspension), capable of holding one or more porous scaffolds which—by reciprocal movement relative to at least one end of the chamber—generates the perfusion of a cell suspension or culture medium through the scaffold pores. Although the scaffold holder, or punch, is described in the examples as a separate component, in some instances the plunger itself may be the scaffold. Neither the scaffold nor holder is limited to any particular shape. The scaffold may consist of granules contained within a basket, or similar assembly. The main innovations are related to (i) how the perfusion through the scaffolds is applied (not through any type of pump), and (ii) the combination of the features of a spinner flask with those of a direct perfusion system. The bioreactor thus represents a single closed system allowing combinations of the following processes: (i) cell expansion in suspension cultures; (ii) cell seeding into porous scaffolds by direct perfusion of the cell suspension; and (iii) cell culture into 3D scaffolds under perfusion.
The reference characters of
The top- and bottom units are assembled following mounting of the scaffolds and sterilization. An external airtight closure is achieved with an elastic bellows, thus ensuring free movement of the lid and sterility inside the bioreactor.
The motion of the top part of the bioreactor is performed by a linear actuator or a linear positioning table, driven by a stepper motor. Alternately, a rotary motor may be used when connected so as to produce a reciprocating motion. Other driving means may be used, for example a pneumatic or hydraulic drive. A control unit facilitates the application of different movement regimes (e.g., frequency, amplitude, ramp, plateau, and waveform). The closed and internally sterile tissue culture unit can be fixed at the bottom to the motion unit, and the lid is connected to the linear drive. The complete assembly is placed on a magnetic stirrer in an incubator at defined temperature, humidity, CO2 and O2 content.
Scaffolds may be fabricated from a variety of biocompatible materials (e.g., synthetic polymers, natural polymers, metals, and ceramics) or tissue. Here a tissue refers to both living tissues, devitalized/decellularized tissue, reconstituted natural tissue, and equivalents. When the scaffold is of synthetic material, it should be a material suitable for cell growth, for example a foam, sponge, non-woven mesh, gel, ceramic, or metal. When the scaffold comprises a tissue, including devitalized tissue, a large number of different tissues might be used, including for example dermis, bladder, bone, arteries, and heart valves
For a number of tissue types (e.g., liver, kidney, vascular) unidirectional flow is important for proper development and function. In the present invention this can be easily achieved by directly pumping medium through the reactor with the scaffold held motionless. This can be done following seeding of the scaffold with alternating perfusion.
The present invention may revitalize a tissue, or maintain viability of a living tissue. Such a tissue, according to the present invention, may then be implanted into a patient. The tissue may be allogenic or xenogenic. Clinically, the use of autologous cells is frequently preferred, however the cells need not be autologous.
During suspension culture, the punch (scaffold holder) of the bioreactor is positioned above the suspension culture with air in between the surface of the medium and the punch. The punch is moved up and down without touching the medium, thus ensuring air exchange (through bacterial filters) with the incubator environment. The cell suspension is stirred, avoiding cell settling and attachment to the walls, and furthermore inducing mixing of oxygen and nutrients throughout the medium. Medium can be changed through microfilters allowing flow of medium but not of cells. Culture in suspension has recently been shown to allow efficient expansion of bone marrow-derived stem cells (Baksh et al., Exp. Hematol. 31:723-732, 2003).
Following suspension culture for possible cell expansion, the lid with the punch (scaffold holder) can be moved down into the cell suspension, and then moved up and down from the medium surface to the bottom above the stirring stirrer bar. The cell suspension is thereby forced[z2] through the pores of three dimensional scaffolds (direct perfusion) and the cells can adhere homogeneously to[z3] the scaffold surface. Different movement regimes can be applied (e.g., frequency, plateau, amplitude, ramp, and waveform) to ensure maximum seeding efficiency and uniform cell distribution throughout the scaffold. The cell suspension can be continuously stirred during seeding, avoiding cell settling and assuring oxygen- and nutrient mixing. In one configuration, the whole punch can be replaced by a porous scaffold, thereby maximizing the volume of the cell-seeded material. Direct perfusion of a cell suspension through porous scaffolds has recently been shown to enhance seeding efficiency, uniformity, and the viability of the seeded cells (Wendt et al., Biotech Bioeng 84:205-214, 2003).
Following cell seeding, subsequent culturing of the constructs is performed by the same oscillating movement of the scaffolds through the medium (now devoid of cells) as in phase 2. Dependent on the scaffold architecture and tissue to be generated, the velocity and motion regime of the punch needs to be defined to reach a careful balance between mass transfer of nutrients and cellular waste products, retention of newly synthesized extracellular matrix components within the constructs, and fluid induced shear stresses within the pores. Medium changes can be performed through the available two ports (connectors) either at specific time points or continuously with an external pump. Optional additional stirring of the medium during perfusion cultures can be performed to improve mass transfer.
The system can be used to perform some or all of the three above-described culture phases. Performing the three culture phases is foreseen to be employed to generate bone-like constructs starting from bone marrow-derived cells expanded in suspension, and later seeded and cultured in/on porous scaffolds. The bone-like constructs can be used as osteoinductive grafts or as a system to expand hematopoietic stem cells within a 3D stromal tissue.
While the present invention has been described with reference to certain preferred embodiments, one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that additions, deletions, substitutions, modifications and improvements can be made while remaining within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
The figures refer to the culture chamber as approximately cylindrical with approximately circular caps, however the end caps of the present invention need not be circular caps and can take other shapes depending on the shape of the culture chamber. Although removable end caps are preferred for ease of access to the culture chamber, the chamber of the present invention is not limited to one with removable caps.
Although the examples discuss an embodiment wherein the scaffold moves in conjunction with an end cap, the invention may also be performed by causing relative motion between the scaffold and at least one end cap, without necessarily having motion of the end caps relative to each other.
This application claims benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/568,255, filed May 6, 2004, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2005/001210 | 5/4/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/25/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60568255 | May 2004 | US |