Leveraging Historical Process Data for Recombinant P. pastoris Fermentation Hybrid Deep Modeling and Model Predictive Control Development
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Hybrid modeling techniques are increasingly important for improving predictive accuracy and control in biomanufacturing, particularly in data-limited conditions. This study develops and experimentally validates a hybrid deep learning model predictive control (MPC) framework for recombinant P. pastoris fed-batch fermentations. Bayesian optimization and grid search techniques were employed to identify the best-performing hybrid model architecture: an LSTM layer with 2 hidden units followed by a fully connected layer with 8 nodes and ReLU activation. This design balanced accuracy (NRMSE 4.93%) and computational efficiency (AICc 998). This architecture was adapted to a new, smaller dataset of bacteriophage Qβ coat protein production using transfer learning, yielding strong predictive performance with low validation (3.53%) and test (5.61%) losses. Finally, the hybrid model was integrated into a novel MPC system and experimentally validated, demonstrating robust real-time substrate feed control in a way that allows it to maintain specific target growth rates. The system achieved predictive accuracies of 6.51% for biomass and 14.65% for product estimation, with an average tracking error of 10.64%. In summary, this work establishes a robust, adaptable, and efficient hybrid modeling framework for MPC in P. pastoris bioprocesses. By integrating automated architecture searching, transfer learning, and MPC, the approach offers a practical and generalizable solution for real-time control and supports scalable digital twin deployment in industrial biotechnology.