Mechanobiology in Medicine (Dec 2024)

Low intensity mechanical signals promote proliferation in a cell-specific manner: Tailoring a non-drug strategy to enhance biomanufacturing yields

  • M. Ete Chan,
  • Christopher Ashdown,
  • Lia Strait,
  • Sishir Pasumarthy,
  • Abdullah Hassan,
  • Steven Crimarco,
  • Chanpreet Singh,
  • Vihitaben S. Patel,
  • Gabriel Pagnotti,
  • Omor Khan,
  • Gunes Uzer,
  • Clinton T. Rubin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 4
p. 100080

Abstract

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Biomanufacturing relies on living cells to produce biotechnology-based therapeutics, tissue engineering constructs, vaccines, and a vast range of agricultural and industrial products. With the escalating demand for these bio-based products, any process that could improve yields and shorten outcome timelines by accelerating cell proliferation would have a significant impact across the discipline. While these goals are primarily achieved using biological or chemical strategies, harnessing cell mechanosensitivity represents a promising – albeit less studied – physical pathway to promote bioprocessing endpoints, yet identifying which mechanical parameters influence cell activities has remained elusive. We tested the hypothesis that mechanical signals, delivered non-invasively using low-intensity vibration (LIV; 90%), and LIV effectively scaled up to T75 flasks. Ultimately, when LIV is tailored to the target cell population, it's highly efficient transmission across media represents a means to non-invasively augment biomanufacturing endpoints for both adherent and suspended cells, and holds immediate applications, ranging from small-scale, patient-specific personalized medicine to large-scale commercial bio-centric production challenges.

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