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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of acid exposure on the conformation, stability, and aggregation of monoclonal antibodies.

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TLDR
The results are consistent with the view that the antibodies undergo limited conformational change, and that incubation at 4°C at low pH results in no time‐dependent conformational changes.
Abstract
Exposure of antibodies to low pH is often unavoidable for purification and viral clearance. The conformation and stability of two humanized monoclonal antibodies (hIgG4-A and -B) directed against different antigens and a mouse monoclonal antibody (mIgG1) in 0.1M citrate at acidic pH were studied using circular dichroism (CD), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and sedimentation velocity. Near- and far-UV CD spectra showed that exposure of these antibodies to pH 2.7-3.9 induced only limited conformational changes, although the changes were greater at the lower pH. However, the acid conformation is far from unfolded or so-called molten globule structure. Incubation of hIgG4-A at pH 2.7 and 3.5 at 4 degrees C over the course of 24 h caused little change in the near-UV CD spectra, indicating that the acid conformation is stable. Sedimentation velocity showed that the hIgG4-A is largely monomeric at pH 2.7 and 3.5 as well as at pH 6.0. No time-dependent changes in sedimentation profile occurred upon incubation at these low pHs, consistent with the conformational stability observed by CD. The sedimentation coefficient of the monomer at pH 2.7 or 3.5 again suggested that no gross conformational changes occur at these pHs. DSC analysis of the antibodies showed thermal unfolding at pH 2.7-3.9 as well as at pH 6.0, but with decreased melting temperatures at the lower pH. These results are consistent with the view that the antibodies undergo limited conformational change, and that incubation at 4 degrees C at low pH results in no time-dependent conformational changes. Titration of hIgG4-A from pH 3.5 to 6.0 resulted in recovery of native monomeric proteins whose CD and DSC profiles resembled those of the original sample. However, titration from pH 2.7 resulted in lower recovery of monomeric antibody, indicating that the greater conformational changes observed at this pH cannot be fully reversed to the native structure by a simple pH titration.

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Citations
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Size-Distribution Analysis of Macromolecules by Sedimentation Velocity Ultracentrifugation and Lamm Equation Modeling

TL;DR: A new method for the size-distribution analysis of polymers by sedimentation velocity analytical ultracentrifugation that exploits the ability of Lamm equation modeling to discriminate between the spreading of the sedimentation boundary arising from sample heterogeneity and from diffusion is described.
Book ChapterDOI

Molten globule and protein folding.

TL;DR: It is predicted and confirmed experimentally that the molten globule state can exist in a living cell and plays an important role in a number of physiological processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Thermal Stability of Immunoglobulin: Unfolding and Aggregation of a Multi-Domain Protein

TL;DR: A strong correlation exists between the denaturation transitions as observed by calorimetry and the changes in secondary structure derived from circular dichroism, after both heat- and low-pH-induced denaturation, a significant fraction of the secondary structure remains.
Journal ArticleDOI

A specific molar ratio of stabilizer to protein is required for storage stability of a lyophilized monoclonal antibody

TL;DR: It appears that the protein must be retained in its native-like state during freeze-drying to assure storage stability in the dried solid and long-term storage at room temperature or above may be achieved by proper selection of the molar ratio and sugar mixture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compact Intermediate States in Protein Folding

TL;DR: Equilibrium compact intermediates may be good models for transient intermediates formed during folding, and in some cases from the same protein under different conditions, may be significantly different.
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