Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Vol.109, No.8, 2039-2047, 2012
Prediction and verification of centrifugal dewatering of P. pastoris fermentation cultures using an ultra scale-down approach
Recent years have seen a dramatic rise in fermentation broth cell densities and a shift to extracellular product expression in microbial cells. As a result, dewatering characteristics during cell separation is of importance, as any liquor trapped in the sediment results in loss of product, and thus a decrease in product recovery. In this study, an ultra scale-down (USD) approach was developed to enable the rapid assessment of dewatering performance of pilot-scale centrifuges with intermittent solids discharge. The results were then verified at scale for two types of pilot-scale centrifuges: a tubular bowl equipment and a disk-stack centrifuge. Initial experiments showed that employing a laboratory-scale centrifugal mimic based on using a comparable feed concentration to that of the pilot-scale centrifuge, does not successfully predict the dewatering performance at scale (P-value <0.05). However, successful prediction of dewatering levels was achieved using the USD method (P-value =0.05), based on using a feed concentration at small-scale that mimicked the same height of solids as that in the pilot-scale centrifuge. Initial experiments used Baker's yeast feed suspensions followed by fresh Pichia pastoris fermentation cultures. This work presents a simple and novel USD approach to predict dewatering levels in two types of pilot-scale centrifuges using small quantities of feedstock (<50?mL). It is a useful tool to determine optimal conditions under which the pilot-scale centrifuge needs to be operated, reducing the need for repeated pilot-scale runs during early stages of process development. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2012; 109:20392047. (c) 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:Pichia pastoris;Baker's yeast;high cell density fermentation;dewatering;ultra scale-down (USD);centrifugation