SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR PROCESS SCALE ISOLATION OF IMMUNOGLOBULIN G
20220204556 · 2022-06-30
Inventors
- Eugene Zurlo (Charleston, SC, US)
- Dennis Curtin (Charleston, SC, US)
- Klaus Peter Radtke (Apex, NC, US)
- Ryan Dorfman (Essex, VT, US)
- Matthew Whelihan (Colchester, VT, US)
Cpc classification
C07K1/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K1/36
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C07K1/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K1/36
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Methods are provided for isolation of immunoglobulin G (IgG) from plasma, where IgG is initially fractioned by salt precipitation, followed by successive ion exchange steps in which IgG appears in unbound, flow-through fractions of the ion exchange steps. Some embodiments employ successive anion exchange steps. Other embodiments employ an anion exchange step followed by application of flow-through of the anion exchange step to a cation exchange step, with IgG collected in flow-through fractions from the cation exchange step. IgG is collected at high yield (typically about 75% or greater) and high purity. Avoidance of binding and elution from chromatography media simplifies processing and scale up without sacrificing IgG quality or yield.
Claims
1. A method for isolating a target protein from a solution comprising the target protein and a plurality of contaminants, comprising: adding a salt to the solution to generate a supernatant and a precipitate; dissolving the precipitate in an aqueous solution to generate a dissolved precipitate comprising the target protein and a first portion of the plurality of contaminants; applying the dissolved precipitate to a first ion exchange media having a first charge with a first polarity to generate a first bound fraction comprising a second portion of the plurality of contaminants and a first flow-through, wherein the first flow-through comprises the target protein and a third portion of the plurality of contaminants; and applying the first flow-through to a second ion exchange media having a second charge with a second polarity, wherein the second polarity is opposite that of the first polarity, to generate a second bound fraction comprising a third portion of the plurality of contaminants and a second flow-through comprising the target protein; wherein capacity of the second exchange media is selected such that less than 10% of content of the target protein in the solution is lost on ion exchange using the second ion exchange media.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the solution is plasma.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the solution is a product of a separation step.
4. The method of claim 13, wherein the salt is a citrate or acetate salt.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the first ion exchange media is an anion exchange media, the second anion exchange media is a cation exchange media, and the target protein is immunoglobulin G.
6. The method of one of claim 1, wherein the plurality of contaminants comprises Factor XI or activated Factor XI.
7. The method of one of claims 1, wherein the first ion exchange media is configured as a particle or bead.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the second ion exchange media is configured as a filter.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising adding caprylate to the dissolved precipitate.
10. The method of claim 9, comprising removing solids following addition of caprylate.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein removing solids comprises application of a filtration step wherein the filter comprises diatomaceous earth, comprising selecting the filter to selectively retain Factor XI or Factor XII.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the depth filter does not include perlite.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein yield of the target protein is at least 70%.
14. The method of claim 1, comprising recovering at least one additional protein from the supernatant.
15. The method of claim 1, wherein the volume of the solution is at least 500 L.
16. A system for isolating a target protein from a solution comprising the target protein and a plurality of contaminants, comprising: a fractionation module configured to receive the solution and perform a salt fractionation step generating a supernatant and a precipitate, separating the supernatant from the precipitate, and providing the precipitate comprising the target protein and a first portion of the plurality of contaminants as a first output; a first separation module comprising a first ion exchange medium having a first charge with a first polarity and fluidically coupled to the first output, wherein the first separation module is configured to provide a second output comprising a flow-through fraction, and wherein the flow-through fraction comprises the target protein and a second portion of the plurality of contaminants; and a second separation module comprising a second exchange media having a second charge with a second polarity, wherein the second polarity is opposite that of the first polarity, wherein the second separation module is configured to retain a third portion of the plurality of contaminants and to provide a third output comprising the target protein, and wherein the second separation module comprises an amount of the second ion exchange media selected to provide a capacity of the second ion exchange media such that less than 10% of content of the target protein in the solution is lost on chromatography over the second ion exchange medium.
17. The system of claim 16, comprising a viral inactivation module within the fluid path between the fractionation module and the first separation module.
18. The system of claim 16, wherein the first ion exchange medium is an anion exchanger, the second ion exchange medium is a cation exchanger, and the target protein is immunoglobulin G.
19. The system of claim 16, wherein the plurality of contaminants comprises a clotting factor selected from the group consisting of Factor XI, activated Factor XI, Factor XII, and activated Factor XII.
20. The system of claim 16, wherein the solution is plasma.
21. The system of claim 16, wherein the solution is a supernatant or precipitate derived from a precipitation step applied to plasma.
22. The system of claim 16, further comprising a depth filter interposed between the first output and the first separation module.
23. The system of claim 22, wherein the depth filter comprises diatomaceous earth and is selected to selectively reduce Factor XI or Factor XII content of material passing through the depth filter.
24. The system of claim 23, wherein the depth filter does not include perlite.
25. The system of claim 16, wherein volume of the solution is at least 500 L.
26. A method for isolating a target protein from a solution comprising the target protein and a plurality of contaminants, comprising: adding a salt to the solution to generate a supernatant and a precipitate, wherein the supernatant comprises the target protein and a first portion of the plurality of contaminants; applying the supernatant to a first ion exchange media having a first charge with a first polarity to generate a first bound fraction comprising a second portion of the plurality of contaminants and a first flow-through, wherein the first flow-through comprises the target protein and a third portion of the plurality of contaminants; and applying the first flow-through to a second ion exchange media having a second charge with a second polarity, wherein the second polarity is opposite that of the first polarity, to generate a second bound fraction comprising the third portion of the plurality of contaminants and a second flow-through comprising the target protein; wherein capacity of the second exchange media is selected such that less than 10% of content of the target protein in the solution is lost on ion exchange using the second ion exchange media.
27. The method of claim 26, wherein the solution is plasma.
28. The method of claim 26, wherein the solution is a product of a fractionation step.
29. The method of claim 26, wherein the salt is a citrate or acetate salt.
30. The method of claim 26, wherein the first exchange media is configured as a particle, bead, or filter.
31. The method of claim 26, wherein the second exchange media is configured as a filter.
32. The method of claim 26, further comprising adding caprylate to the supernatant.
33. The method of claim 32, comprising removing solids following addition of caprylate.
34. The method of claim 33, wherein removing solids comprises use of a depth filter comprising diatomaceous earth.
35. The method of claim 34, wherein the depth filter does not include perlite.
36. The method of claim 26, wherein yield of the protein is at least 70%.
37. The method of claim 26, comprising recovering at least one additional protein from the precipitate.
38. The method of claim 26, wherein volume of the solution is at least 500 L.
39. A system for isolating a target protein from a solution comprising the target protein and a plurality of contaminants, comprising: a fractionation module configured to receive the blood product and perform a salt fractionation step generating a supernatant and a precipitate, separating the supernatant from the precipitate, and providing the supernatant as a first output, wherein the supernatant comprises the target protein and a first portion of the plurality of contaminants; a first separation module comprising a first ion exchange medium having a first charge with a first polarity and fluidically coupled to the first output, wherein the first separation module is configured to provide a second output comprising a flow-through fraction, and wherein the flow-through fraction comprises the target protein and a second portion of the plurality of contaminants; and a second separation module comprising a second exchange media having a second charge with a second polarity, wherein the second polarity is opposite that of the first polarity, wherein the second separation module is configured to retain a third portion of the plurality of contaminants and to provide a third output comprising the target protein, and wherein the second separation module comprises an amount of the second on exchange media selected to provide a capacity of the second ion exchange media such that less than 3% of content of the target protein in the solution is lost on chromatography over the second ion exchange medium.
40. The system of claim 39, comprising a viral inactivation module within the fluid path between the fractionation module and the first separation module.
41. The system of claim 39, wherein the solution is plasma.
42. The system of claim 39, wherein the solution is a supernatant or precipitate derived from a fractionation step applied to plasma.
43. The system of claim 39, wherein volume of the solution is at least 500 L.
44. A method of isolating immunoglobulin G, comprising: adding a citrate salt to an aqueous solution comprising immunoglobulin G (IgG) to a concentration of at least 10% by weight, thereby generating a first supernatant and a first precipitate, wherein the IgG comprises a plurality of IgG subclasses; separating the first supernatant from the first precipitate; adding sodium citrate to the first supernatant to a concentration of at least 22% by weight, thereby generating a second supernatant and a second precipitate; separating the second precipitate from the second supernatant; dissolving the second precipitate to generate a dissolved second precipitate; adjusting conductivity of the dissolved second precipitate to 1-10 mS (5 mS to 10 mS than 7 mS to form a diluted protein solution; applying the diluted protein solution to a first ion exchange column comprising an anion exchange media to generate a first flow-through; and applying the first flow-through to a second ion exchange column comprising an anion exchange media to generate a second flow-through comprising an immunoglobulin G preparation, wherein the second flow-through provides at least partial separation of two or more immunoglobulin G subclasses, and wherein the immunoglobulin G preparation has a purity of at least 85% by weight.
45. The method of claim 44, comprising adding a fatty acid to the dissolved second precipitate to form a suspension, wherein the fatty acid comprises a carbon chain having from 4 to 10 carbons.
46. The method of claim 44, comprising applying the dissolved second precipitate to a depth filter.
47. The method of claim 44, comprising selecting composition and size of the depth filter to avoid activation of clotting factors present in the dissolved second precipitate.
48. The method of claim 44, wherein adjusting conductivity is not performed by buffer exchange.
49. The method of claim 44, wherein the anion exchange media comprises a quaternary amine.
50. The method of claim 44, comprising: applying the second flow-through containing immunoglobulin to a cation exchange medium under conditions in which IgG binds to the cation exchange medium; washing cation exchange medium; and eluting bound IgG from the cation exchange medium.
51. The method of claim 50, wherein the cation exchange medium comprises a carboxylic acid group.
52. The method of claim 44, wherein the first ion exchange column and the second ion exchange column are coupled to one another in series by a fluid flow path.
53. The method of claim 44, wherein the first flow-through is collected and pooled prior to application to the second ion exchange column.
54. The method of claim 44, wherein volume of the aqueous solution is at least 500 L.
55. A pharmaceutical composition, comprising: immunoglobulin G (IgG) at a concentration of at least 40 mg/mL, wherein said IgG has a purity of greater than 95% and not been eluted from a chromatography media; and immunoglobulin A at a concentration of less than 10 μg/mL.
56. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 55, wherein content of activated Factor XI is less than 1 mU/mL.
57. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 55, wherein content of Factor XII is less than 0.1 μg/mL.
58. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 55, wherein IgG is isolated from at least 2 L of plasma.
59. A method of improving tolerance and increasing infusion rate for a therapeutic protein, comprising: isolating the therapeutic protein by a method of one of claims 1, wherein the therapeutic protein has a purity of at least 95% and has not been subjected to denaturing conditions; and providing the therapeutic protein for infusion.
60. The method of claim 59, wherein the therapeutic protein is IgG.
61. A method of improving tolerance and increasing infusion rate for a therapeutic protein, comprising: isolating the therapeutic protein by a method of one of claims 26, wherein the therapeutic protein has a purity of at least 95% and has not been subjected to denaturing conditions; and providing the therapeutic protein for infusion.
62. The method of claim 61, wherein the therapeutic protein is IgG.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0028] The Inventors have developed a commercially scalable process that can provide an IgG yield of approximately 75% to 80% or more while meeting the purity standards set by the FDA for a commercial product. This compares to an IgG 50-60% yield of the current Cohn Process. The process also dramatically reduces contamination by Factor XI, Factor XII, and/or IgA in the final product, and can reduce such contamination to levels that are currently undetectable.
[0029] One should appreciate that the disclosed techniques provide many advantageous technical effects including rapid provision of immunoglobulin G at high purity and high yield at process scale.
[0030] The Inventors process produces a more native IgG since the process eliminates the use of alcohol and minimizes denaturing conditions (e.g., extreme pH changes, etc.). In addition, in the claimed process IgG is not hound and subsequently eluted from chromatography media. This advantageously both enhances yield and reduces the chance of denaturation, while also simplifying the isolation process and greatly reducing processing time. As such these processes are distinct and different from (and much more cost effective than) current IgG isolation processes, and can provide an IgG product with improved protein stability, increased in vivo half-life, more rapid infusion rates, improved patient tolerance, and reduced immunogenicity. The Inventors' manufacturing process takes approximately two days to complete, compared to approximately 7 to 10 days for the Cohn process-dependent processes. The construction and operational costs for a manufacturing plant for this new process is projected a fraction of the cost of existing plants while also producing higher yields of other therapeutic proteins in their active and native form. Furthermore, no flammable/explosive chemicals are used, reducing capital investment, increasing worker safety, and reducing negative environmental impact. It should be appreciated that, while isolation of immunoglobulin G (IgG) is discussed herein, Inventors contemplate that other serum proteins of commercial value (e.g., AAT, albumin) can be isolated from various intermediate process streams (e.g., supernatants or precipitates from precipitation steps, materials bound to chromatography media, etc.).
[0031] Some embodiments of the inventive concept utilize two or more ion exchange chromatography steps having the same ion exchange effect (e.g., anion exchange) in succession, where buffer conditions and column binding capacity are selected or optimized to provide the target protein (e.g., IgG) in the flow-through fraction of each of the ion exchange chromatographic steps. Such ion exchange steps can be performed using media of similar capacity (e.g., similar or identical volumes of the same ion exchange media). Alternatively, in some embodiments ion exchange media of similar ion exchange function but different capacity (e.g., two different volumes of the same ion exchange media) can be used. Such ion exchange media can be arranged such that the flow-through fraction of a first volume or amount of ion exchange media can be directed to the inlet of a second volume of amount of ion exchange media. Alternatively, in some embodiments all or portions of the flow-through fraction of a first volume or amount of ion exchange media can be pooled prior to application to a second volume of amount of ion exchange media.
[0032] Embodiments of the inventive concept can utilize either anion or cation exchange chromatography, where buffer conditions and column binding capacity are selected or optimized to provide the target protein (e.g., IgG) in the flow-through fraction of each chromatographic step.
[0033] An example of a process of the inventive concept is shown in
[0034] In some embodiments such re-dissolved materials can be clarified, for example by passage through one or more filters, in order to remove residual undissolved or precipitated materials that would foul the chromatography media. In some embodiments the buffer composition of such re-dissolved precipitate can be modified prior to application to the ion exchange media. This can be accomplished through buffer exchange (i.e., a process where salt is removed from the protein containing solution), such as through size exclusion chromatography, dialysis, diafiltration, and/or re-precipitation (e.g., using PEG) followed by re-dissolution. Alternatively, in some embodiments such a re-dissolved precipitate can be diluted (which retains salts originally present in the re-dissolved precipitate) until a desired osmolarity and/or conductivity (e.g., 2 to 10 mS) is achieved. The flow-through fraction from a first ion exchange step is transferred to a second ion exchange step utilizing an ion exchange media with similar charge characteristics (i.e. anion exchange, cation exchange), and the protein of interest is recovered in the flow-through fraction of this second ion exchange step at high yield (e.g., greater than 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, or 95% relative to content of the protein of interest in the starting material) and at high purity (e.g., greater that 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%. 98%, or 99%). Inventors contemplate that in some embodiments a single large ion exchange column can be used in place of two ion exchange columns, however such an approach would necessarily limit the scale of operations. Although the ion exchange steps are shown as anion exchange steps, embodiments in which the ion exchange steps are performed using a cation exchange media are also contemplated and can be applied to isolation of proteins other than IgG.
[0035] Another embodiment of the inventive concept is shown in
[0036] It should also be appreciated that, while blood products are specifically cited in
[0037] Inventors have found methods of the inventive concept are particularly useful in the isolation of IgG from blood plasma, although application to other solutions containing IgG (e.g., cell culture media, cell lysates, dissolved inclusion bodies, other body fluids, etc.) is contemplated. Within the context of this application plasma is considered to include freshly collected serum, freshly collected plasma, reconstituted lyophilized plasma, refrigerated plasma, frozen plasma, recovered plasma, cryo-poor plasma, cryo-poor plasma into which the cryoprecipitate has been re-dissolved, and mixtures of two or more of these. Such plasma can, for example, be obtained as pooled material from a blood or plasma collection center. An example of a method of the inventive concept for isolation of IgG from plasma is shown in
[0038] For the first two steps the Inventors modified and/or optimized a base fractionation process using a range of salt concentrations for two precipitation steps to determine the optimum concentrations (e.g., about 11% in the first salt precipitation and about 26% in the second salt precipitation) and to maximize IgG yield while minimizing unwanted proteins. While citrate or acetate salts are preferred, any suitable salt can be used. Such salts can be added rapidly, as a salt solution (e.g., as a calculated volume of a 50% by weight salt solution) and/or in dry form (e.g., as a powder or crystalline solid). As shown the first precipitation step produces an IgG-rich supernatant, and the second precipitation step produces an IgG-rich precipitate or paste. This IgG-rich precipitate is dissolved (e.g., in water) prior to ion exchange steps. In such embodiments a buffer exchange step (e.g., dialysis, diafiltration, ultrafiltration followed by dilution, size exclusion chromatography, etc.) can be performed prior to ion exchange steps. Alternatively, the re-dissolved precipitate can be diluted until a desired conductivity (e.g., 2 to 10 mS) or ionic strength is achieved. It should be appreciated that precipitation can occur during buffer exchange steps, and that additional filtration steps (e.g., depth filtration, or depth filtration followed by a clarifying or polishing filtration step) can be implemented to remove such precipitated materials prior to the initial ion exchange step. As shown in
[0039] In some embodiments a virus inactivation step is applied to the dissolved IgG-rich precipitate prior to an ion exchange step. For example, the pH can be lowered to 5.7 and caprylate added to inactivate enveloped viruses. Such steps do not appear to contribute to any significant IgG losses and caprylate can be effectively removed in subsequent ion exchange steps.
[0040] In conventional protein purification processes yield is sacrificed for purity of the final protein product. Surprisingly, in the methods described herein IgG is typically recovered at both high yield (greater than 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, or 95% of the IgG present in the starting material) and high purity (greater than 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 98%, or 99%).
EXAMPLES
[0041] Multiple base fractionations of IgG from cryo-precipitate poor plasma in two precipitation steps utilizing sodium citrate as the precipitant were performed. Two-liter test batches were prepared in pilot facilities. The IgG yield achieved was 90% in the second precipitate (i.e., precipitate resulting from the second precipitation step) and with only 3% in the second supernatant (i.e., supernatant resulting from the second precipitation step), while the second achieved 95% yield in the second precipitate and only 3% in the second supernatant. The uniform presence of ˜3% IgG in second supernatant indicates that the base fractionation process is robust and yields approximately 95% of the starting IgG in plasma.
[0042] A range of sodium citrate concentrations were explored to develop an optimal protocol for IgG yield and purity through the base fractionation process. Cryo-poor plasma was subjected to an initial 11% sodium citrate (w/v) precipitation step for 1 hour followed by centrifugation at 4,500×g. The resulting first supernatant 1 was further fractionated in a second sodium citrate precipitation step for 2 hours at citrate concentrations ranging from 22% to 28% (w/v) sodium citrate followed by centrifugation at 4,500×g. Pastes from the first precipitation steps (i.e., first precipitates) and second precipitation steps (i.e., second precipitates) were dissolved in water for injection at a concentration of 10 mL water per gram of wet paste. During fractionation processes both temperature (2-8° C.) and pH (7.0±0.1) were maintained. Citrate concentration was adjusted by adding 50% w/v sodium citrate at ambient temperature (20-25° C.).
[0043] Analysis of total protein and IgG content was carried out largely by A.sub.280 measurement and total IgG ELISA (Invitrogen), respectively. While the total IgG ELISA' s measurement precision can be less accurate in complex solutions, such as cryo-poor plasma, it is suitable method for measuring relative IgG concentrations in process steps with increasingly pure IgG.
[0044] Typically, a 98% recovery of IgG in the first supernatant was found in the initial 11% (w/v) citrate precipitation step (data not shown). As shown in Table 1, IgG yield in the second precipitate from the second precipitation step increases as citrate concentrations increase from 22% to 24% (w/v), then plateaus at citrate concentrations of from 26% and 28% w/v (at about 85% IgG recovery from the first supernatant). These data are further corroborated by the IgG concentrations observed in the corresponding second supernatants, which display the inverse trend.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 2.sup.nd Precipitate IgG Recovery Sample weight (g) (%) 22% Sup N/A 29 22% Paste 19.7 68 24% Sup N/A 13 24% Paste 27.7 71 26% Sup N/A 9 26% Paste 33 85 28% Sup N/A 11 28% Paste 39.8 85
[0045] The increase in second precipitate weight without corresponding increases in IgG yield indicates that precipitation beyond 26% (w/v) citrate accumulates undesired contaminating proteins. This was confirmed by SDS-PAGE (
[0046] Robustness of the precipitation steps was characterized by fractionating aliquots of the same cryo-poor plasma pool with 11-13% (w/v) citrate and then with 22-26% citrate (w/v). IgG yields in the resulting supernatants and precipitates were analyzed via ELISA. The mean IgG levels obtained are shown in
[0047] To further characterize robustness of initial precipitation steps, four 2L volumes of a pooled cryo-poor plasma were processed, each using an 11% (w/v) citrate concentration for the initial precipitation and a 26% (w/v) citrate concentration for the second precipitation step. The second precipitate from each of these was dissolved in water for injection (10 mL/g of wet paste). IgG concentrations were measured by nephelometry. Results are shown in Table 2.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Batch A Batch B Batch C Batch D Yield Yield Yield Yield Mean Yield Sample (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) Cryo-poor 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 plasma 1.sup.st 97.3 99.5 98.5 97.0 98.1 Supernatant 1.sup.st 0.6 0.7 0.5 0.9 0.7 Precipitate 2.sup.nd 6.1 7.5 5.2 6.0 6.2 Supernatant 2.sup.nd 90.2 89.9 91.0 90.2 90.3 Precipitate
[0048] As shown, the nephelometry data are very consistent and show a 98.1% mean recovery of IgG in the first supernatant obtained from the starting cryo-poor plasma after the initial 11% precipitation step. This data is consistent with the lack of IgG (<1%) in the first precipitate. The final IgG yield in the second precipitate across the four batches in P2 was 90.3% IgG and mean value of 6.2% IgG remaining in the second supernatant. Inventors believe that some IgG-containing precipitate was not collected during centrifugation, and that recovery of IgG in the second precipitate can be about 95% or greater in the second precipitate with more extensive centrifugation.
[0049] It was noted that on dissolving such second precipitates in water for injection at 10 mL/g wet paste, the solution can appear cloudy and/or opalescent. Inventors believe that cloudiness is likely the result of suspended lipids and non-solubilized impurities. In small-scale studies dialysis was used for buffer exchange (i.e., removal of salts from the IgG-containing solution) prior to subsequent ion exchange steps. Such precipitated materials can be removed by centrifugation or filtration (e.g., using a depth filter) prior to application of the dialyzed material to ion exchange media in order to avoid fouling. Similar precipitation was noted during the use of diafiltration which made diafiltration unsuitable for buffer exchange prior to ion exchange chromatography.
[0050] The Inventors found that on scale-up, when depth filtration was used to remove materials precipitating from the re-dissolved second precipitation it was found that additional non-IgG proteins were being introduced into ion exchange chromatography. At a small scale such non-IgG proteins were removed in the dialysis/centrifugation process and did not contribute to the protein burden on the ion exchange column.
[0051] In anion exchange media capacity studies, breakthrough on a Q-Sepharose™ column was determined to occur at approximately 14 A.sub.280 units per mL of resin. After 2 injections of 35 A.sub.280 units (14 A.sub.280/mL) onto a 5mL Q-Sepharose™ column high molecular weight contaminants begin to appear in several places above the 62 kDa marker with significant albumin (.Math.60kDa) breakthrough occurring after a third 35 A.sub.280 unit injection (21 A.sub.280/mL). Typical results of such studies are shown in an SDS-PAGE gel in
[0052]
[0053] Typically, isolation of IgG using ion exchange chromatography utilizes anion exchange as negative selection (i.e., the IgG is not bound) coupled to cation exchange as a positive selector to which IgG is bound and subsequently eluted after contaminants are washed from the bound IgG. Such binding, washing, and elution steps in cation exchange chromatography limit scalability of such approaches and also provide additional opportunities for loss of IgG during the process.
[0054] Inventors used information regarding Q-Sepharose™ column capacity as shown in
[0055] Materials indicated by arrows in
[0056] Three complete runs were performed using cryo-poor plasma at a 2 L scale and two similarly sized 2 L Q-Sepharose™ columns arranged in succession. Chromatography was performed on an AKTA Explorer FPLC™ system. The final conditions for these processes were as follows: 2×2 L Q-Sepharose™ columns (1×Axichrome™ 100/300 and 1×Axichrome™ 140/300) coupled in sequence and equilibrated in 20 mM NaOAC pH 5.7. The columns were loaded at 45 mL/min, washed at 50 mL/min and eluted with a 2M NaCl step (implemented at 9500 mL). One-liter fractions were collected based on A.sub.280 reading. Under these conditions, a high-purity IgG with acceptable FXIa levels was obtained, indicating that the process is scalable. The physical characteristics of the three batches (batches D, E, and F) after filtration are shown below in Table 3.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Volume Total Batch # (mL) A280 A280s Conductivity E 3923 5.9 23067 7.01 F 4127 5.2 21254 6.86 G 4146 6.1 25166 7.12 Mean 4065 5.7 23163 7.0
[0057] In general, all 2 L scale processes performed identically in chromatography with no significant differences between profile or fraction collection. For illustrative purposes batch E was chosen as representative example. Fraction collection for product was started when the A.sub.280 reached 50 mAU and terminated when the absorbance decreased to 125 mAU. As shown in
[0058]
[0059] Regulatory requirements can necessitate that two virus inactivation/removal steps be included in any biological processing of human-derived products manufactured for human use. To that end, methods of the inventive concept can include a virus inactivation step applied to the second precipitate, and/or nano filtration to remove viruses after ion exchange chromatography.
[0060] Two-liter scale methods can be modified to incorporate, for example, treatment with 20 mM sodium caprylate for 1 hour at room temperature for viral inactivation prior to depth filtration. A small amount of white precipitate can be formed upon addition of caprylate to the dissolved second precipitate. Table 4 shows the caprylate content of samples from treatment through Q-Sepharose™ chromatography. After Sartoclear™ DL10 depth filtration 63% of the original bolus of caprylate is detectable in the clarified sample. When dilution of P2 post depth filtration sample is accounted for in the post Sartoclear™ XLG sterilization filter sample there is no loss of caprylate in this filtration step. All remaining caprylate is removed during Q-Sepharose™ chromatography with no detectable levels of caprylate observed in any IgG fraction after this process step.
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Caprylate Sample (mM) Post DL10 12.6 Post XLG 6.4 Post Q- N/D Sepharose
[0061] In addition to virus inactivation, virus removal (e.g., by nanofiltration) can be applied for virus removal. For example, nanofiltration can be applied as the second of two virus inactivation/removal steps in methods of the inventive concept. Virus removal can be accomplished using any suitable nanofilter/nanofiltration device and/or method. Suitable nanofiltration devices include, but are not limited to, a Sartorius Virosart Max™ 0.1 μm prefilter followed by a Sartorius Virosart HC™ 0.02 μm virus removal filter. In a typical virus removal step a prefilter and virus removal filter are attached in sequence and flushed with water per manufacturer's instructions prior to addition of the product material. For example, a coupled set of 220 cm.sup.2 Virosart Max™ and Virosart HC™ filters (Sartorius) can be used for processing material derived from about 2 L of plasma. Alternatively, two or more coupled sets of such coupled filters can be used to, decrease loss of flux through the filter assembly and decrease processing time.
[0062] Use of flow-through fractions throughout methods of the inventive concept for isolation of a protein of interest can yield solutions in which the concentration of the target protein is non-optimal for clinical application. Accordingly, methods of the inventive concept can include a terminal protein concentration step that takes place after the protein of interest has been purified and utilizes techniques known in the art. Such concentration steps can, for example, be performed by ultrafiltration, and can incorporate a diafiltration step that permits buffer exchange into a pharmaceutically acceptable buffer composition. For example, in the isolation of IgG the highly purified product material can be concentration to about 4% (w/v) or higher (e.g., about 5% w/v) IgG, with diafiltration during the concentration step used to replace the extant buffer with 0.2M Glycine (pH 4.2 to 6.5) or any other pharmaceutically acceptable buffer. For example, such a concentration/diafiltration step can be performed in three steps: (1) concentration of a nanofiltered protein solution to a volume approximately 500 mL, (2) diafiltration of the approximately 500 mL volume into a formulation buffer (e.g., 8 or more diavolumes), and (3) concentration of the diafiltered volume to the target concentration of protein (e.g., about 5% w/v IgG). Protein concentration can, for example, be monitored by absorbance at 280 nm.
[0063] The overall IgG yield of the three batches (E, F, G) was determined using a validated nephelometric assay for the starting plasma as well as for the subsequent fractions of the precipitation steps. Once the purification efforts had reached purities of over 90% IgG, A.sub.280 measurement and an extinction coefficient of 1.3 were used to quantify IgG. Table 5 shows the mean total IgG for all three batches present at each process step. The mean process yield is 75% with the most significant process losses occurring in the depth filtration (˜8%) and Q-Sepharose™ chromatography (˜9%) steps.
TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 Protein Concentration Nephelometry A.sub.280 Mean Yield Sample (g) (g) (%) Cryo-Poor 16.1 100 Plasma 1.sup.st 15.8 95 Supernatant 2.sup.nd 14.5 88 Precipitate Post Depth 13.2 80 filter Post 12.7 79 Clarification filter Second Q- 11.2 70 Sepharose Flow- Through Post- 11.0 68 Nanofiltration Final 12.1 75
[0064] The chromatography step performed using two anion exchange columns arranged in series removes >99% of all proteins other than IgG. Surprisingly, it was found that two small trailing peaks (fractions 6 and 8 in
[0065] In prior art process for protein isolation there is generally an inverse relationship between yield and purity of the protein product. Surprisingly, Inventors have found that methods of the inventive concept can provide both very high yields (in excess of 70% of IgG content of starting material) and high purity. Comprehensive analytical testing was performed to examine the safety and co-purifying non-IgG protein content for several IgG product purifications using a method of the inventive concept employing two Q-Sepharose™ columns arranged in series, with IgG collected in flow-through fractions.
[0066] As shown in
[0067] Analytical testing results of IgG products from a method of the inventive concept employing two Q-Sepharose™ are shown in Table 6. For this purpose, IgG products from 2 L scale batches produced using such a method of the inventive concept were formulated in 0.2M Glycine pH 4.2, with a target of about 5% total protein. This is consistent with current practice in regard to therapeutic IgG products for human use. IgG concentrations were determined by absorbance at 280 nm by spectrophotometry. Additional protein content determinations were performed on the final product formulations. The mean concentrations across methods (N=5) of the three respective final formulations were 41.2, 52.9 and 50.9 mg/mL, respectively. IgG Subclass distribution was measured by IgG subclass ELISA and determined to be 63% IgG1, 28% IgG2, 7% IgG3 and 2% IgG4 across the three final formulations. The respective cryo-poor plasma starting material values were 59% IgG1, 29% IgG2, 7% IgG3, and 4% IgG4. In regard to other immunoglobulin species, only IgA was detected by ELISA (3.3 μg/mL) and was confirmed by LCMS. IgA content, however, is below 4 μg/mL. IgM was not detected by ELISA, and LCMS only detected trace amounts of IgM, IgE and IgD peptides
TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 6 Test Method Batch E Batch F Batch G Acceptance Criteria SDS-PAGE Purity 98% 98% 98% ≥96% Purity by LCMS (Std. Dig.) 99.2 99.3 99.3 No ACC IgG by Spectrophotometry 41.9 mg/mL 54.0 mg/mL 48.4 mg/mL No ACC Protein by Bradford Assay 43.9 mg/mL 53.5 mg/mL 54.6 mg/mL No ACC IgG Nephelometry 37.2 mg/mL 48.9 mg/mL 47.0 mg/mL No ACC Total IgG ELISA 36.2 mg/mL 47.7 mg/mL 48.3 mg/mL No ACC IgG Protein G HPLC 46.6 mg/mL 60.5 mg/mL 56.4 mg/mL No ACC IgG Subclass IgG 1 IgG 2 63% 28% 63% 28% 62% 28% Starting Plasma Distribution IgG 3 IgG 4 7% 2% 7% 2% 7% 2% IgG 1 IgG 2 IgG 3 IgG 4 59% 29% 7% 4% IgA 2.9 μg/mL 3.6 μg/mL 3.4 μg/mL As stated on label IgM ND ND ND <1 μg/mL Caprylate ND ND ND No ACC TGA (mU/mL) All values >2.0 mU/mL .sup. ≤1.0 mU/mL Anti-A Titer Value 32 32 32 ≤64 Anti-B Titer Value 16 16 16 ≤64 Anti-D Titer Value No titer No titer No titer ≤8 Anti-Complement All values >1.0 CH.sub.50 U/mg ≤1.0 CH.sub.50 U/mg (CH.sub.50 U/mg IgG) Fc 15 mg IGIV 136% 100% 129% ≥60% Function 30 mg IGIV 100% 114% 110% ≥60% PKA (IU/mL) 1.0 1.7 1.3 ≤35 IU/mL NAPTT Clot Time 141 s 177 s 220 s ≥150 s SE-HPLC % Dimer 3.884 3.722 3.794 Mono-&di-meric ≥90% % Monomer 95.911 96.143 96.055 Polymeric <2% % IGIV 99.795 99.866 99.849 Fragment <3% % Polymeric (HMW) 0.027 0.012 0.021 % Fragment (LMW) 0.179 0.123 0.130
[0068] Product from an IgG isolation method of the inventive concept employing two anion exchange columns arranged in series was characterized for content related to safety and efficacy. Accordingly, Anti A, B and D antibodies, anti-complement activity (ACA), protein Kinase A (PKA) activity, Fc function, activated coagulation factor XI (FXIa) activity by thrombin generation assay or TGA), and non-activated partial thromboplastin time (NAPTT) activity were characterized for several 2 L scale final product formulations. Results were as follows: [0069] Anti A,B,D Antibodies: All three product batches tested passed typical acceptance criteria for products for human use. [0070] Fc Function/Polymerization: Fc function in all three product batches was >100% at the two concentrations of IgG tested, which meets or exceeds typical acceptance criteria for IgG product for human use. Furthermore, SE-HPLC data indicates that >96% of the IgG is monomeric with <4% dimer, <0.2% higher order polymers, and almost undetectable levels of Ig fragments. This meets both FDA and EU specifications for IgG products for human use. [0071] PKA and ACA Activity: PKA and ACA activity are tests for the presence of contaminants that can lead to activation/inactivation of innate immunity through their respective proteolytic cascades. PKA activity was low (Mean=1.3 IU/mL) and well below the 35 IU/mL acceptance criteria typical for IgG products for human use. However, ACA activity was above the 1.0 CH50 U/mg. [0072] Procoagulant Activity: Clotting time measures inherent procoagulant activity (regardless of source), whereas the TGA assay measures FXIa-like activity. At the lowest dilution, batch E (141 sec) barely failed to meet the >150 sec acceptance criteria, while batches F and G passed. FXIa-like activity in all three batches was somewhat high (>2.0 mU/mL) indicating activation of the contact pathway of coagulation at some point during the purification process. In order to eliminate FXIa (i.e., activated factor XI) and other trace contaminations use of a cation exchange column applied to effluent from the serially arranged Q-Sepharose™ columns can be used, by binding IgG found in the Q-Sepharose™ eluate and subsequent elution of IgG from the cation exchange media. While optimizing conditions for this process Inventors surprisingly found that contaminating contact activation factors (e.g., activated Factor XI), as well as other contaminants, bound to the cation exchange media with higher affinity than IgG. This observation was used to scale the capacity of the cation exchange medium to match the amount of the contaminants, thereby preventing binding of IgG to the cation exchange media. With this adjustment, the cation exchange medium can be used in negative selection mode (i.e., with collection of the desired protein product in the flow-through), as shown below.
[0073] Alternatively, some embodiments of the inventive concept utilize both anion and cation exchange chromatography, where buffer conditions, differential protein affinity, and binding capacity of ion exchange chromatography media are selected or optimized to provide the target protein (e.g., IgG) in the flow-through fraction of each chromatographic step. Towards this end an initial ion exchange step (e.g., anion exchange, cation exchange) can be performed using a high capacity ion exchange media that does not appreciably bind the protein of interest. For example, in the isolation of IgG a large/high capacity anion exchange step can be performed, providing a flow-through fraction containing IgG and retaining a bound fraction that includes contaminating proteins. The flow-through fraction is then applied (in some embodiments following the addition of a salt to adjust ionic strength/conductivity) to a small or low capacity cation exchange media. It should be appreciated that in conventional processes utilizing both anion and cation exchange, cation media is utilized in the opposite mode of the anion exchange step (where IgG is found in the flow-through fraction). In a conventional IgG isolation process the target protein (IgG) would be retained on the cation exchange media, while the remaining protein contaminations are found in the flow-through fraction. After washing or rinsing the cation exchange media, IgG would then be recovered by elution (e.g., by application of a buffer with high salt content).
[0074] In contrast to typical methods, in this embodiment of the inventive concept the cation exchange step is designed to bind the impurities while the protein of interest (IgG) and remains in the flow-through fraction. The size of this small or low capacity cation exchange media is selected so that it is near or slightly (e.g., 1%, 2%, 5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%) greater than the amount or capacity for breakthrough of a contaminating protein found in the flow-through of the anion exchange media (taking buffer conditions into account). Without wishing to be bound by theory, the Inventors believe that this permits contaminating proteins to displace any IgG that may temporarily bind to the cation exchange media. Careful selection of the amount/capacity of the cation exchange media provides efficient removal of contaminating protein while also providing high yields of IgG in the flow-through fraction.
[0075] Another example of a process of the inventive concept is shown below in
[0076] In some embodiments such re-dissolved materials can be clarified, for example by passage through one or more filters, in order to remove residual undissolved or precipitated materials that would foul the chromatography media. In some embodiments the buffer composition of such re-dissolved precipitate can be modified prior to application to the anion exchange media. In some embodiments this can be accomplished through buffer exchange (i.e., a process where salt is removed from the protein containing solution), such as through size exclusion chromatography, dialysis, diafiltration, concentration via ultrafiltration followed by dilution, electrodialysis, and/or re-precipitation (e.g., using PEG) followed by re-dissolution. Alternatively, in preferred embodiments such a re-dissolved precipitate can be diluted (which retains salts originally present in the re-dissolved precipitate) until a desired osmolarity and/or conductivity (e.g., 2 to 10 mS) is achieved. The flow-through fraction from the anion exchange step is transferred to a low capacity cation exchange step using a cation exchange media. In contrast to other processes, the protein of interest is recovered in the flow-through fraction of this second, cation exchange step at high yield (e.g., greater than 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, or 95% relative to content of the protein of interest in the starting material) and at high purity (e.g., greater that 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%. 98%, or 99%). The initial ion exchange step is shown as an anion exchange step, however embodiments in which the initial ion exchange step is performed using a high capacity cation exchange media followed by a low capacity anion exchange step (with the protein of interest primarily present in the flow-through volume of both ion exchange steps) are also contemplated, and can be applied to isolation of proteins other than IgG.
[0077] Another embodiment of the inventive concept is shown in
[0078] In some of such embodiments the supernatant obtained from salt fractionation can be clarified, for example by passage through one or more filters, in order to remove residual particulate or precipitated materials that would foul the chromatography media. In some embodiments the buffer composition of such a supernatant can be modified prior to application to the anion exchange media. This can be accomplished through buffer exchange (i.e., a process where salt is removed from the protein containing solution), such as through size exclusion chromatography, dialysis, diafiltration, and/or precipitation (e.g., using PEG) followed by dissolution. Alternatively, in preferred embodiments such supernatant can be diluted (which retains salts originally present in the supernatant) until a desired osmolarity and/or conductivity (e.g., 2 to 10 mS) is achieved. The flow-through fraction from an anion exchange step is transferred to a low capacity cation exchange step utilizing a cation ion exchange media (e.g., a media containing carboxylic acid and/or sulfonate groups). Contrary to prior art processes, the protein of interest is found in the flow-through fraction of the anion exchange step and is recovered in the flow-through fraction of the second, cation ion exchange step at high yield (e.g., greater than 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, or 95% relative to content of the protein of interest in the starting material) and at high purity (e.g., greater that 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%. 98%, or 99%).
[0079] Although initial ion exchange steps in
[0080] Inventors have found methods of the inventive concept are particularly useful in the isolation of IgG from blood plasma, although application to other solutions containing IgG (e.g., cell culture media, cell lysates, other body fluids, etc.) is contemplated. Within the context of this application plasma is considered to include freshly collected plasma, refrigerated plasma, frozen plasma, cryo-poor plasma, and cryo-poor plasma into which the cryoprecipitate has been re-dissolved. Such plasma can, for example, be obtained from commercial collection centers. An example of a method of the inventive concept for isolation of IgG from plasma is shown in
[0081] For the first two steps shown in
[0082] For an at-scale process to be successful, fouling of media used in processing steps (e.g., chromatography media) needs to be avoided. Such at-scale processes can utilize from about 500-600 L (e.g., for hyperimmune) to 8,000 L or more (e.g., for normal IgG) of plasma or serum. Applicants have found that prior art methods that utilize citrate precipitation in initial fractionation steps (such as those described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,879,331) were not useful at scales at which simple bag dialysis for buffer exchange became impractical (e.g., around 1 L or less). Inventors found that attempts to replace bag dialysis with diafiltration in order to support larger scale applications was impractical due to rapid fouling of diafiltration membranes, even though precipitated material may not be evident in the protein solutions being treated.
[0083] Towards that end Inventors have found that filtration can be used to remove residual undissolved or suspended material and/or material that precipitates following dissolving of the IgG-rich precipitate (e.g., on viral inactivation). Surprisingly, Inventors have found that the selection of filtration media used prior to ion exchange steps has a large effect on the concentrations of both IgG and undesired contaminants (e.g., Factor XI, Factor XII). Typical results of screening studies for filters useful in at-scale IgG isolation are shown in Table 7.
TABLE-US-00007 TABLE 7 Total Filter protein [Factor XI], [Factor XII], [ApoH], Filter material (%) [IgG], mg/mL ng/mL μg/mL μg/mL Starting Not applicable 100% 3.43 290 10.17 8.9 material F1 Diatomaceous 70% 2.84 128 0.065 7.5 earth F2 Regenerated 75% 2.86 237 11.04 Nondetectable cellulose F3 Regenerated 78% 3.08 200 11.26 7.7 cellulose F4 Perlite 79% 3.18 184 9.45 8.0 F5 Diatomaceous 71% 2.98 146 9.15 6.7 earth/Perlite F6 Diatomaceous 72% 2.44 147 8.62 Nondetectable earth/Perlite F7 Diatomaceous 74% 2.68 157 9.11 7.6 earth/Perlite F8 Diatomaceous 72% 2.78 177 9.15 7.3 earth/Perlite F9 Silica 54% 2.62 60 Nondetectable Nondetectable F10 Diatomaceous 74% 2.86 168 9.47 Nondetectable earth/Perlite F11 Quaternary 77% 3.03 312 11.79 7.6 amine/PES
It is evident that fiber composition has an effect on retention of the desired IgG product on the filter material as well as retention of contaminants such as Factor XI and Factor XII. In particular, use of a diatomaceous earth depth filter (e.g., F1) shows minimal IgG retention (as a function of total protein) and marked reductions in both Factor XI and Factor XII contamination. In contrast, while silica F9) was found to effectively remove Factor XI and Factor XII, overall loss of protein content would negatively impact IgG yield. Similarly, while quaternary amine/PES filters retained little protein there was little or no retention of contaminating proteins.
[0084] Accordingly, in some embodiments of the inventive concept a depth filter that includes diatomaceous earth can be incorporated into an at scale IgG isolation process prior to an ion exchange step. In some of such embodiments the diatomaceous earth filter can be a depth filter. In some embodiments, a diatomaceous earth filter used in the method can exclude perlite. In some embodiments an additional particle filtration step (e.g., 1 μm, 0.45 μm, 0.2 μm pore filtration) can be performed after such a filtration step in order to reduce fouling of chromatography media in subsequent steps. In some embodiments size of the depth filter can be optimized to provide sufficient filter capacity and flux retention, while minimizing available surface area that can result in activation of Factor XI and/or Factor XII.
[0085] As shown in
[0086] In preferred embodiments of the inventive concept, the re-dissolved precipitate from the second precipitation step is not subjected to a buffer exchange process prior to application to anion exchange media. In the context of this application a buffer exchange process refers to a process in which salts are removed from the solution containing the protein of interest (e.g., IgG). Examples of such processes include, but are not limited to, dialysis, diafiltration, concentration by ultrafiltration followed by dilution, and size exclusion chromatography. Such buffer exchange processes do not include simple dilution of non-concentrated re-dissolved precipitate, which retains salts present in the protein solution. Since the protein of interest (e.g. IgG) is recovered in flow-through fractions of the ion exchange steps, it is preferred that if dilution is performed it is done so using a minimal volume (e.g., less than 3× the original volume, about 1.5× to 2.5× the original volume, about 2× the original volume, about 1.5× the original volume, or with about the original volume) of diluent.
[0087] As shown in
[0088] Such cation exchange media can be provided on any suitable support agarose, cross linked agarose, cellulose, polyacrylamide, polystyrene, glass, or combinations thereof) and in any suitable configuration (e.g., porous beads, non-porous beads, fibers, wools, filters, etc.). Inventors have found that the capacity of the cation exchange media utilized can be quite small, and in preferred embodiments can be provided by a filter with pendant cation exchange groups. This advantageously combines purification and clarification steps.
[0089] In some embodiments of the inventive concept the buffer composition, conductivity, and/or pH of the first flow-through fraction can be modified prior to application to the cation exchange media in order to optimize capacity and selectivity for contaminants. In preferred embodiments salts can be added to increase the ionic strength or conductivity of the first flow-through fraction to fall within a desired range.
[0090] In some embodiments the second flow-through fraction can be subjected to additional processing steps. Such additional processing steps can include nanofiltration for virus removal, such as filtration using a 0.02 μm pore membrane. Inventors have found that this effectively retains any remaining virus particles while minimizing yield losses.
[0091] In some embodiments the purified protein solution can be prepared for use by concentration and diafiltration in order to provide a drug product having a useful concentration in a pharmacologically compatible buffer that provides stability. For IgG, such a step can provide an IgG concentration of, for example, about 4% to 6% IgG (w/v) or greater in a suitable formulation buffer (e.g., 0.2M glycine pH 4.2 to pH 6.5) with minimal losses. Concentration can be increased or otherwise adjusted using known methods.
[0092] Typical IgG yield results for an IgG isolation process of the inventive concept are shown in Table 8.
TABLE-US-00008 TABLE 8 Total yield based on A.sub.280 absorbance/initial nephelometry values corrected for sample removal. Extinction Coefficient for IgG: 1.3 Total IgG IgG Total IgG IgG Concentration Volume Total [A280] [Neph] [Neph] Yield Sample (A280/mL) (mL) (A280) (mg) (mg/mL) (mg) (%) Cryo-poor 44.41 2000 88820 N/A 8.25 16500 100.0 Plasma First 35.62 2490 88693.8 6.34 15786.6 95.7 Supernatant First N/A 22.9 g N/A N/A Precipitate Second 14.07 3850 54169.5 Supernatant Second N/A 187 g N/A Precipitate Dissolved 14.73 2000 29460 N/A 7.33 14660 88.8 Second Precipitate Post Depth 10.47 2570 26907.9 N/A 5.86 15060.2 91.3 Filter Post 0.2 μm 6.37 4284 27289.08 N/A 3.49 14951.16 90.6 Filter Anion 2.63 5680 14938.4 N/A 2.3 13064 79.2 Exchange Flow- Through Cation 2.52 5930 14943.6 11495 2.13 12630.9 76.6 Exchange Flow- Through Post Nano- 2.24 6107 13679.68 N/A N/A Filtration Final Product 67.11 248 16643.28 12802 N/A N/A 77.6 Total Additive Loss from Sample Removal 0.96
Test results obtained from the material shown in Table 8 met all release criteria for commercial IgG product. The results are Table 9 and Table 10.
TABLE-US-00009 Test Result Pass/Fail EP Standard PKA 1.48 IU/mL Pass <35 IU/mL IgA 1.57 μg/mL N/A “Not more than is stated on the product label” IgM Not Detectable N/A No EP standard IgG subclass IgG 1 IgG 2 IgG 3 IgG 4 Product should be Starting Material 62 28 7 4 representative of Finished Product 62 30 7 1 starting material Fc function 119% Pass >60% ACA 0.83 CH50U/mg Pass ≤1.5 CH50U/mg NaPTT 219.5 sec Pass >200 sec FXIa (chromogenic) <0.04 mU/mL Pass No EP standard FXIa (eCAT/TGA) 0.79 mU/mL Pass No EP standard (<1 mU/mL historically in prior art)
TABLE-US-00010 TABLE 10 Acceptance Criteria Test Method Result (ACC) SE- % Dimer 2.149 Mono- & dimeric ≥90% HPLC % Monomer 97.361 Polymeric <2% % IGIV 99.510 Fragment <3% % Polymeric 0.338 (HMW) % Fragment 0.152 (LMW)
In addition to remarkably low levels of Factor XI contamination, the Inventors have found that methods of the inventive concept provide surprisingly low levels of IgA contamination.
[0093] The methods described above are robust and commercially scalable processes that consistently produce about a 72-85% yield of IgG (relative to IgG content of the starting material) from starting plasma in just 24 to 72 hours (preferably about 48 hours). The resulting product is >99% pure IgG product with 100% functionality.
[0094] It should be appreciated that additional plasma proteins can be recovered from various intermediate waste streams generated by methods of the inventive concept, for example the precipitate generated in the first fractionation step, the supernatant generated in the second fractionation step, the bound fraction from the anion exchange step, and/or the bound fraction from the cation exchange step. In some embodiments two or more of such intermediate product streams can be combined as a source of a non-IgG plasma protein to be isolated. Such intermediate products can be treated by any suitable method (e.g., additional precipitation steps, affinity chromatography, size exclusion chromatography, hydrophobic interaction chromatography, ion exchange chromatography, and/or mixed mode chromatography) to facilitate isolation of additional non-IgG proteins from the starting material.
[0095] Inventors believe that the citrate precipitation steps are gentler than prior art ethanol precipitation processes and minimize the risk of protein denaturation since the IgG product is produced without alcohol, extreme pH changes, numerous and prolonged exposures to extreme temperatures and lengthy processing times. The avoidance of alcohol and low pH has implications for improved protein stability, in vivo half-life, immunogenicity of the protein therapeutics, patient tolerability, and faster infusion rates.
[0096] The Inventors' process is also environmentally friendly (salt vs. alcohol) and more cost-effective than Cohn fractionation-based processes.
[0097] It should be apparent to those skilled in the art that many more modifications besides those already described are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein. The inventive subject matter, therefore, is not to be restricted except in the spirit of the appended claims. Moreover, in interpreting both the specification and the claims, all terms should be interpreted in the broadest possible manner consistent with the context. In particular, the terms “comprises” and “comprising” should be interpreted as referring to elements, components, or steps in a non-exclusive manner, indicating that the referenced elements, components, or steps may be present, or utilized, or combined with other elements, components, or steps that are not expressly referenced. Where the specification claims refer to at least one of something selected from the group consisting of A, B, C . . . and N, the text should be interpreted as requiring only one element from the group, not A plus N, or B plus N, etc.