Abstract

A certain impurity may bind weaker or tighter to a particular type of chromatography column (e.g., ion exchange, hydrophobic interaction or mixed-mode) than the target protein, and this forms the basis for separation. For impurities that bind weaker, they can be removed by an appropriate pre-elution wash. However, we previously showed that wash-enabled impurity clearance is usually sensitive to loading density, causing poor robustness of the process. In this work, with a bispecific antibody case study, we compared the relative robustness of anion exchange and the corresponding mixed-mode chromatography, which mediates both anion exchange and hydrophobic interactions, on removing a weakly-bound byproduct by wash. It was learned that under a fixed appropriate wash condition, the latter achieves consistent byproduct clearance and good yield over a much wider range of loading density than the former. As wide loading density range is highly desirable for large-scale manufacturing, the above finding suggests that for a chromatography step that employs stepwise elution and relies on pre-elution wash for removing weakly-bound impurities, mixed-mode chromatography could be a better choice than the corresponding monomode ion exchange chromatography.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call