A non-affinity purification process for GMP production of prefusion-closed HIV-1 envelope trimers from clades A and C for clinical evaluation

•Purification of clade A and C HIV-1 envelope (Env) trimers by a novel non-affinity method.•Env trimers produced in pre-fusion closed conformation without antibody capture.•Non-affinity purified trimers show minimal exposure of CD4-induced or V3 epitopes.•Scalable process yields up to 0.2 g/L of pur...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vaccine 2021-06, Vol.39 (25), p.3379-3387
Hauptverfasser: Gulla, Krishana, Cibelli, Nicole, Cooper, Jonathan W., Fuller, Haley C., Schneiderman, Zachary, Witter, Sara, Zhang, Yaqiu, Changela, Anita, Geng, Hui, Hatcher, Christian, Narpala, Sandeep, Tsybovsky, Yaroslav, Zhang, Baoshan, VRC Production Program, McDermott, Adrian B., Kwong, Peter D., Gowetski, Daniel B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Purification of clade A and C HIV-1 envelope (Env) trimers by a novel non-affinity method.•Env trimers produced in pre-fusion closed conformation without antibody capture.•Non-affinity purified trimers show minimal exposure of CD4-induced or V3 epitopes.•Scalable process yields up to 0.2 g/L of purified prefusion-closed HIV-1-Env trimer. Metastable glycosylated immunogens present challenges for GMP manufacturing. The HIV-1 envelope (Env) glycoprotein trimer is covered by N-linked glycan comprising half its mass and requires both trimer assembly and subunit cleavage to fold into a prefusion-closed conformation. This conformation, the vaccine-desired antigenic state, is both metastable to structural rearrangement and labile to subunit dissociation. Prior reported GMP manufacturing for a soluble trimer stabilized in a near-native state by disulfide (SOS) and Ile-to-Pro (IP) mutations has employed affinity methods based on antibody 2G12, which recognizes only ~30% of circulating HIV strains. Here, we develop a scalable manufacturing process based on commercially available, non-affinity resins, and we apply the process to current GMP (cGMP) production of trimers from clades A and C, which have been found to boost cross-clade neutralizing responses in vaccine-test species. The clade A trimer, which we named “BG505 DS-SOSIP.664”, contained an engineered disulfide (201C-433C; DS) within gp120, which further stabilized this trimer in a prefusion-closed conformation resistant to CD4-induced triggering. BG505 DS-SOSIP.664 was expressed in a CHO-DG44 stable cell line and purified with initial and final tangential flow filtration steps, three commercially available resin-based chromatography steps, and two orthogonal viral clearance steps. The non-affinity purification enabled efficient scale-up, with a 250 L-scale cGMP run yielding 9.6 g of purified BG505 DS-SOSIP.664. Antigenic analysis indicated retention of a prefusion-closed conformation, including recognition by apex-directed and fusion peptide-directed antibodies. The developed manufacturing process was suitable for 50 L-scale production of a second prefusion-stabilized Env trimer vaccine candidate, ConC-FP8v2 RnS-3mut-2G-SOSIP.664, yielding 7.8 g of this consensus clade C trimer. The successful process development and purification scale-up of HIV-1 Env trimers from different clades by using commercially available materials provide experimental demonstration for cGMP manufacturing of trimeric HIV-Env vaccine im
ISSN:0264-410X
1873-2518
1873-2518
DOI:10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.04.063