Publication | Closed Access
Maximizing binding capacity for protein A chromatography
49
Citations
13
References
2014
Year
ImmunologyImmunodominancePeptide ScienceAnalytical UltracentrifugationDual FlowProtein PurificationProtein FoldingBioanalysisBiochemical EngineeringImmunochemistryAntibody EngineeringMonoclonal Antibody TitersChromatographyProtein ChemistryBiochemistryChromatographic AnalysisAntibody ScreeningBiomolecular EngineeringBiomanufacturingAntibody CaptureNatural SciencesBiotechnologyProtein EngineeringMedicine
Advances in cell culture expression levels in the last two decades have resulted in monoclonal antibody titers of ≥10 g/L to be purified downstream. A high capacity capture step is crucial to prevent purification from being the bottleneck in the manufacturing process. Despite its high cost and other disadvantages, Protein A chromatography still remains the optimal choice for antibody capture due to the excellent selectivity provided by this step. A dual flow loading strategy was used in conjunction with a new generation high capacity Protein A resin to maximize binding capacity without significantly increasing processing time. Optimum conditions were established using a simple empirical Design of Experiment (DOE) based model and verified with a wide panel of antibodies. Dynamic binding capacities of >65 g/L could be achieved under these new conditions, significantly higher by more than one and half times the values that have been typically achieved with Protein A in the past. Furthermore, comparable process performance and product quality was demonstrated for the Protein A step at the increased loading.
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