Abstract

For recombinant antibody purification, removal of product-related impurities usually relies on the two polishing steps post Protein A chromatography. A certain impurity may bind weaker or tighter to a particular type of column than the target antibody, and this forms the basis for separation. For impurities that bind weaker, they can be removed by pre-elution wash under appropriate conditions. For impurities that bind stronger, they can be separated by using a suitable condition that selectively elutes the product. In this study, with a bispecific antibody case, we compared the relative robustness of byproduct removal by wash and by elution using two different types of chromatography. The data suggest that elution-enabled byproduct clearance is more robust than wash-enabled clearance, and the former approach provides consistent impurity clearance over a relatively wide range of loading density.

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