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CELL CULTURES and SEKONDARY METABOLITES

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When callus pieces are agitated in a liquid medium, they tend to break up. ... cells results in efficient production of arbutin (a skin depigmentation agent) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CELL CULTURES and SEKONDARY METABOLITES


1
CELL CULTURESand SEKONDARY METABOLITES
2
ESTABLISHMENT OF CELL CULTURES
3
  • When callus pieces are agitated in a liquid
    medium, they tend to break up.
  • Suspensions are much easier to bulk up than
    callus since there is no manual transfer or solid
    support.
  • Large scale (50,000l) commercial fermentations
    for Shikonin and Berberine.

4
Introduction of callus into suspension
  • Friable callus goes easily into suspension.
  • 2,4-D
  • Low cytokinin
  • semi-solid medium
  • enzymic digestion with pectinase
  • blending
  • Removal of large cell aggregates by sieving.
  • Plating of single cells and small cell aggregates
    - only viable cells will grow and can be
    re-introduced into suspension.

5
Introduction into suspension
Sieve out lumps 1 2
Initial high density

Subculture and sieving
Pick off growing high producers
Plate out
6
Small cells and agregate
Long cell
Actively dividing cells
Cell types
Giant cell (G),
Giant cell (G)
7
Growth kinetics
  • 1. Initial lag dependent on dilution
  • 2. Exponential phase (dt 1-30 d)
  • 3. Linear/deceleration phase (declining
    nutrients)
  • 4. Stationary (nutrients exhausted)

3
4
2
1
8
Characteristics of plant cells
  • Large (10-100mM long)
  • Tend to occur in aggregates
  • Shear-sensitive
  • Slow growing
  • Easily contaminated
  • Low oxygen demand (kla of 5-20)
  • Will not tolerate anaerobic conditions
  • Can grow to high cell densities (gt300g/l fresh
    weight).
  • Can form very viscous solutions

9
Special reactors for plant cell suspension
cultures
  • Modified stirred tank
  • Air-lift
  • Air loop
  • Bubble column
  • Rotating drum reactor

10
Modified Stirred Tank
Glasses for shakers
Wing-Vane impeller
Standard Rushton turbine
11
Airlift systems
Poor mixing
Bubble column
Airlift (draught tube)
Airloop (External Downtube)
12
Ways to increase product formation
  • Select
  • Start off with a producing part
  • Modify media for growth and product formation.
  • Feed precursors or feed intermediates
    (bioconversion)
  • Produce plant-like conditions (immobilisation)

13
Shaker
Bioreactor
controoledchamber
Glasses for shakers
Shakers
Glasses
Glasses for shakers
Rotary shaker
Glasses for shakers
14
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15
  • Cell growth and differentiation
  • Somatic embryo production

16
  • Secondary metabolite production

Anthocyanine production in cell cultures
17
Secondary metabolites from plant cell cultures
  • Features of these compounds
  • low molecular wt
  • synthesis (in plant cell) is tightly regulated
  • A few products are commercially produced
  • examples shikonin, ginseng compounds, berberine
  • more are not produced because of two main
    problems
  • low yields in in vitro culture
  • feedback inhibition from SMs stored
    intracellularly

18
Secondary metabolites from plant cell cultures
  • Transport mechanisms in cultivated plant cells
  • cells that transport SMs to vacuolar space for
    storage
  • final yield limited to storage capacity of medium
  • cells that secrete SMs into the medium
  • final yield limited to properties of the medium
  • production is more easily manipulated, but
    separation of culture medium from cultures is
    required
  • SMs originating from cells in the medium,
    secreted into the medium, taken up by other cells
    and stored

19
Secondary metabolites from plant cell cultures
  • Techniques for increasing yields
  • usually attempt to redirect transport
  • permeabilization
  • objective is to permeabilize tonoplast and/or
    cell membrane to drive secretion of SM into the
    culture medium
  • chemical agents such as DMSO or Triton X-100
  • problem poor viability after treatment
  • two-phase systems

20
Secondary metabolites from plant cell cultures
  • Other systems
  • immobilized cell culture (2 approaches)
  • entrapment in alginate beads
  • adherence of cells to a porous membrane
  • in both cases, the objectives
  • control of growth (high nutrient levels first,
    then elicitation or starvation)
  • release of SM into the medium where it can be
    harvested

21
Secondary metabolites from plant cell cultures
  • Other systems
  • hairy root culture culture of fast-growing
    roots by
  • inoculation with Agrobacterium rhizogenes (esp.
    useful where differentiated cells are required
    for SM production)
  • transfer of T-DNA causing hairy roots, then
    elimination of Agrobacterium by antibiotic
  • (transformed) hairy roots are first subcultured
    to solid, then liquid medium

22
Secondary metabolites from plant cell cultures
  • Other systems
  • hairy root culture (contin)
  • SM is released into the medium, then harvested
  • primary advantage a simple system w/o problems
    inherent with cell suspensions
  • limited to spp. susceptible to A. rhizogenes
  • biotransformation

23
Secondary metabolites from plant cell cultures
  • Other systems
  • biotransformation
  • chemical conversion of an exogenously supplied
    substance by living cell cultures
  • example addition of hydroquinone (inexpensive
    precursor) into liquid culture medium containing
    vinca cells results in efficient production of
    arbutin (a skin depigmentation agent)

24
Secondary metabolites from plant cell cultures
  • Outlook for SM production in plant cell cultures
    (where plant cell systems may be preferred over
    whole plants)
  • rare and endangered plants of pharmaceutical
    interest
  • plants that grow too slowly to match a sudden
    demand (e.g., Taxol present only in the bark of
    Taxus brefolia)
  • some cell cultures can be made to produce a
    single compound, e.g., sanguinarine from poppy
    cell culture

25
diosgenin, kodein, morfin, atropin, hiyosiyamin,
skopolamin, digoksin, digitoksin, kuinin,
reserpin, artemisinin and taxol.
26
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27
  • Lithospermum erythrorhizon, red pigment
    (shikonin),

28
Biotransformation
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