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Multiplex genome editing eliminates lactate production without impacting growth rate in mammalian cells
Date Issued
2025-01-14
Date Available
2026-01-19T09:43:24Z
Abstract
The Warburg effect, which describes the fermentation of glucose to lactate even in the presence of oxygen, is ubiquitous in proliferative mammalian cells, including cancer cells, but poses challenges for biopharmaceutical production as lactate accumulation inhibits cell growth and protein production. Previous efforts to eliminate lactate production in cells for bioprocessing have failed as lactate dehydrogenase is essential for cell growth. Here, we effectively eliminate lactate production in Chinese hamster ovary and in the human embryonic kidney cell line HEK293 by simultaneous knockout of lactate dehydrogenases and pyruvate dehydrogenase kinases, thereby removing a negative feedback loop that typically inhibits pyruvate conversion to acetyl-CoA. These cells, which we refer to as Warburg-null cells, maintain wild-type growth rates while producing negligible lactate, show a compensatory increase in oxygen consumption, near total reliance on oxidative metabolism, and higher cell densities in fed-batch cell culture. Warburg-null cells remain amenable for production of diverse biotherapeutic proteins, reaching industrially relevant titres and maintaining product glycosylation. The ability to eliminate lactate production may be useful for biotherapeutic production and provides a tool for investigating a common metabolic phenomenon.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Nature Metabolism
Volume
7
Issue
1
Start Page
212
End Page
227
Copyright (Published Version)
2025 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
2522-5812
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
Multiplex genome editing eliminates lactate production without impacting growth rate in mammalian cells.pdf
Size
3.58 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
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