19F Dark-State Exchange Saturation Transfer NMR Reveals Reversible Formation of Protein-Specific Large Clusters in High-Concentration Protein Mixtures

Proteins frequently exist as high-concentration mixtures, both in biological environments and increasingly in biopharmaceutical co-formulations. Such crowded conditions promote protein–protein interactions, potentially leading to formation of protein clusters, aggregation, and phase separation. Char...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytical chemistry (Washington) 2019-04, Vol.91 (7), p.4702-4708
Hauptverfasser: Edwards, John M, Bramham, Jack E, Podmore, Adrian, Bishop, Steven M, van der Walle, Christopher F, Golovanov, Alexander P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Proteins frequently exist as high-concentration mixtures, both in biological environments and increasingly in biopharmaceutical co-formulations. Such crowded conditions promote protein–protein interactions, potentially leading to formation of protein clusters, aggregation, and phase separation. Characterizing these interactions and processes in situ in high-concentration mixtures is challenging due to the complexity and heterogeneity of such systems. Here we demonstrate the application of the dark-state exchange saturation transfer (DEST) NMR technique to a mixture of two differentially 19F-labeled 145 kDa monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to assess reversible temperature-dependent formation of small and large protein-specific clusters at concentrations up to 400 mg/mL. 19F DEST allowed quantitative protein-specific characterization of the cluster populations and sizes for both mAbs in the mixture under a range of conditions. Additives such as arginine glutamate and NaCl also had protein-specific effects on the dark-state populations and cluster characteristics. Notably, both mAbs appear to largely exist as separate self-associated clusters, which mechanistically respond differently to changes in solution conditions. We show that for mixtures of differentially 19F-labeled proteins DEST NMR can characterize clustering in a protein-specific manner, offering unique tracking of clustering pathways and a means to understand and control them.
ISSN:0003-2700
1520-6882
DOI:10.1021/acs.analchem.9b00143