Dr.-Ing. Thomas Wucherpfennig

Boehringer Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co. KG
Bioprocess Development Biologicals

Binger Strasse 173

55216 Ingelheim am Rhein

Phone +49 7351 54-144806

Mail Dr. Thomas Wucherpfennig


Thomas pursued the study of Biotechnology at the Technical University of Braunschweig, Germany, and Chemical Engineering at the University of Waterloo, Canada. He earned his PhD in Bioprocess Engineering from the Technical University of Braunschweig. Prior to joining Boehringer Ingelheim as a postdoctoral fellow in 2014, Thomas acquired valuable experience in the industrial biotech sector at Roche and Clariant. Since 2015, he has held various roles in cell culture process development at Boehringer Ingelheim and currently serves as a Senior Principal Scientist, spearheading late-stage process development. In addition, Thomas is a lecturer at FH Oberösterreich in Wels and TUHH – Hamburg University of Technology, His research focus is on bioprocess scale-up, bioreactor characterization, Process Analytical Technology (PAT), and cell culture process modeling.

Research Interests

  • Scale-up of bioprocesses
  • Bioreactor characterization
  • Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD)
  • Process Analytical Technology (PAT)
  • Cell culture process modelling

Publications

[185002]
Title: Characterization of hydrodynamic stress in ambr250® bioreactor system and its impact on mammalian cell culture.
Written by: O. Šrom, V. Trávníková, J. Wutz, M. Kuschel, A. Unsoeld, T. Wucherpfennig, M. Šoóš
in: <em>Biochem Eng J</em>. (2021).
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Abstract: During the cell culture in stirred aerated vessels, both stirring and sparging is required for proper homogenization of a mixture and oxygen delivery. Quality by design (QbD) in biopharmaceutical industry aims at identification of the impact of mass transfer, dissolved oxygen, pH and hydrodynamic stress on the cell behavior, productivity and product quality. Most of these properties are influenced by impeller motion and sparger aeration. In this research, the shear sensitive poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) aggregates are used as probes capable of determining the maximum hydrodynamic stress (τmax) present in the ambr250® bioreactor. The results from our micro-aggregate probes are connected with the cultivation data using two Chinese hamster ovary K1 glutamine synthetase mediated cell lines (CHO-K1 GS) to determine the stress threshold, below which no significant impact of operating conditions on cell behavior is observed. Such calibrated system can be in the future used as a scale-down model of large-scale bioreactors to test cell robustness during process development.