Behavior of host-cell-protein-rich aggregates in antibody capture and polishing chromatography
•HCP persistence is partially mediated by aggregates in mAb solutions.•Aggregates compete with mAb to adsorb specifically in protein A chromatography.•Aggregates may co-elute with the mAb in protein A chromatography.•Aggregate and HCP clearance may be correlated in flow-through AEX polishing.•Relati...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Chromatography A 2023-08, Vol.1702, p.464081-464081, Article 464081 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •HCP persistence is partially mediated by aggregates in mAb solutions.•Aggregates compete with mAb to adsorb specifically in protein A chromatography.•Aggregates may co-elute with the mAb in protein A chromatography.•Aggregate and HCP clearance may be correlated in flow-through AEX polishing.•Relatively large aggregates are differentially retained by AEX resins.
Recent work has shown that aggregates in monoclonal antibody (mAb) solutions may be made up not just of mAb oligomers but can also harbor hundreds of host-cell proteins (HCPs), suggesting that aggregate persistence through downstream purification operations may be related to HCP clearance. We have examined this in a primary analysis of aggregate persistence through processing steps that are typically implemented for HCP reduction, demonstrating that the phenomenon is relevant to depth filtration, protein A chromatography and flow-through anion-exchange (AEX) polishing. Confocal laser scanning microscopy observations show that aggregates compete with the mAb to adsorb specifically in protein A chromatography and that this competitive interaction is integral to the efficacy of protein A washes. Column chromatography reveals that the protein A elution tail can have a relatively high concentration of aggregates, which corroborates analogous observations from recent HCP studies. Similar measurements in flow-through AEX chromatography show that relatively large aggregates that harbor HCPs and that persist into the protein A eluate can be retained to an extent that appears to depend primarily on the resin surface chemistry. The total aggregate mass fraction of both protein A eluate pools (∼ 2.4 – 3.6%) and AEX flow-through fractions (∼ 1.5 – 3.2%) correlates generally with HCP concentrations measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) as well as the number of HCPs that may be identified in proteomic analysis. This suggests that quantification of the aggregate mass fraction may serve as a convenient albeit imperfect surrogate for informing early process development decisions regarding HCP clearance strategies. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9673 1873-3778 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.chroma.2023.464081 |