1.21 - Modes of Culture/Animal Cells
References (0)
Cited by (3)
Bioremediation of dyes: a brief review of bioreactor performance
2023, Environmental Technology ReviewsHigh cell density cultivation process
2014, Animal Cell Biotechnology: In Biologics ProductionEffects on Cell Growth, Lipid and Biochemical Composition of Thalassiosira weissflogii (Bacillariophyceae) Cultured under Two Nitrogen Sources
2022, Applied Sciences (Switzerland)
Xudong Zhang received his BS degree in biotechnology from Peking University, Beijing, China in 2001 and his doctorate degree in biochemistry from the Ohio State University in 2008. He is currently a Sr. scientist in Cell Culture Process Development at Diosynth Biotechnology. His current work focuses on optimization and characterization of cell culture processes using structured experimentation, characterization of bioreactors by scalability study, and evaluation of changing technologies in the biopharmaceutical industry.
Yuan Wen received his BS degree in bioengineering from Zhejiong University, China in 2003 and PhD degree in chemical and biomolecular engineering from the Ohio State University in 2009. His graduate research focused on microfluidic and microscale high-throughput cell culture systems for cell-based assays and bioprocess development. He currently works as a staff scientist for PD Direct® Bioprocess Services at Life Technologies Corporation.
Shang-Tian Yang is a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the Ohio State University, where he has been on the faculty since 1985 and currently teaches courses in biotechnology and bioprocess engineering. Dr. Yang is a co-founder of two biotechnology startup companies. He is also the director of Ohio Bioprocessing Research Consortium and has worked with many companies in commercial technology development. Dr. Yang has broad research interests in bioengineering. His current research involves biocatalysis, cell culture, tissue engineering, functional genomics, and microfluidic biochips for high-throughput cell-based assays and biodiagnostics. He has more than 150 scientific publications and 13 patents in the bioengineering field. Dr. Yang received his BS degree in Agricultural Chemistry from National Taiwan University and MS and PhD degrees in biochemical engineering from Purdue University. He is an elected fellow of American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering and an active member of American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) and American Chemical Society (ACS). He also serves as an associate editor for the journal Process Biochemistry.