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Bioreactor Design Concepts for Viral Vaccine Production

  • 1 Edición - 12 de mayo de 2024
  • Última edición
  • Editores: Surajbhan Sevda, Sachin Kumar
  • Idioma: Inglés

Bioreactor Design Concepts for Viral Vaccine Production covers a range of interdisciplinary chapters from the engineering perspective of bioreactor design to the biotec… Leer más

Descripción

Bioreactor Design Concepts for Viral Vaccine Production covers a range of interdisciplinary chapters from the engineering perspective of bioreactor design to the biotechnological perspectives of vector design for vaccine development. The book covers bioreactor concepts such as static systems, single-use systems, stirred tanks, perfusion, wave and packed-beds. It reviews options for efficient and economical production of human vaccines and discusses basic factors relevant for viral antigen production in mammalian cells, avian cells, and insect cells. This book will be a great resource for those interested in implemented novel bioreactor design or experimental schemes towards intensified or/and enhanced vaccine production.

Puntos claves

  • Covers the fundamentals of bioreactor designs
  • Provides strategies for designing a successful vector-based vaccine
  • Discusses the applications of biological kinetics, thermodynamics and basic substrate requirements for viral vaccine production

De interès para

Researchers, academics, post-graduate students, and industry professionals of multidisciplinary fields, in particular virology, vaccinology, cell culture and bioreactor design

Índice

1. Introduction: Understanding of Bioreactor

2. Stoichiometry for Biochemical Process

3. Biochemical aspects of bioreactor operation

4. Scale-Up of Cell-Culture Bioreactors

5. Application of modeling in bioreactor design and analysis

6. Vaccine and Vaccine types

7. Development a new vaccine at lab scale

8. Animal cell cultivation in bioreactor

9. Characterization of cultured animal cells

10. Bioreactor design for vaccine production

11. Advance development in membranes for virus producing bioreactors

12. Downstream Processing for vaccines

13. Vaccine against RNA viruses

14. Vaccine against DNA viruses

15. Development of a bioprocess for rotavirus vaccine

16. Single-use fixed bed bioreactor for scalable virus production

17. Production of rabies vaccine in the large-scale bioreactor

18. Bioreactor for hepatitis C virus vaccine

19. Bioreactor for Vero cell for the production of viral vector and vaccines.

20. Titration and dose calculation of the vaccine stock

21. Bioreactor process development for DNA vaccine production

Detalles del producto

  • Edición: 1
  • Última edición
  • Publicado: 16 de mayo de 2024
  • Idioma: Inglés

Sobre los editores

SS

Surajbhan Sevda

Surajbhan Sevda is currently an Assistant Professor at the Department of Biotechnology, National Institute of Technology, Warangal, India. Prior to this, he was a technical officer (research scientist) at IIT Guwahati, India. He completed his Doctoral Degree in 2013 from Indian Institute of Technology, New Delhi, India. He was a visiting scientist at University of Calgary, Canada in 2018. His research experience lies in the bioreactor design, modelling of microbial growth, biofuels, and bioenergy, life cycle analysis (LCA), metal recovery, biosensor development, green chemistry, microbial electrosynthesis, enzyme and antibiotic production.

Afiliaciones y experiencia
Assistant Professor, Department of Biotechnology, National Institute of Technology, Warangal, India

SK

Sachin Kumar

Dr. Sachin Kumar is currently working as Associate Professor at the Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, India. He obtained his Ph.D. in molecular virology from University of Maryland in 2010. His research area is viral Immunology, in broad sense, is the study of viral infections in context of immune responses to such infections which can cause deleterious effect on the functions of the cells. Viruses are highly adaptable and have developed ways to avoid detection by specific immune cells. Immune response to a virus follows a cascade of steps and different routes: via specific targeting cytotoxic immune cells, or chemicals such as interferon, or via antibody binding and subsequent complement system activation. Our current understanding of host immune responses to viruses has progressed in recent years, and 'Viral Immunology' as an area has established itself as a sub-discipline of 'Immunology' tackling the immunological context in viral infections.
Afiliaciones y experiencia
MVSc, PhD, Professor, Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, Assam, India

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