4.6 Article

Continuous integrated antibody precipitation with two-stage tangential flow microfiltration enables constant mass flow

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 116, Issue 5, Pages 1053-1065

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.26922

Keywords

diafiltration; IgG; membrane; polyethylene glycol; tubular reactor

Funding

  1. H2020 LEIT Biotechnology [635557]
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 program

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Continuous precipitation is a new unit operation for the continuous capture of antibodies. The capture step is based on continuous precipitation with PEG6000 and Zn++ in a tubular reactor integrated with a two-stage continuous tangential flow filtration unit. The precipitate cannot be separated with centrifugation, because a highly compressed sediment results in poor resolubilization. We developed a new two-stage tangential flow microfiltration method, where part of the concentrated retentate of the first stage was directly fed to the second stage, together with the wash buffer. Thus, the precipitate was concentrated and washed in a continuous process. We obtained 97% antibody purity, a 95% process yield during continuous operation, and a fivefold reduction in pre-existing high-molecular-weight impurities. For other unit operations, surge tanks are often required, due to interruptions in the product mass flow out of the unit operation (e.g., the bind/elute mode in periodic counter-current chromatography). Our setup required no surge tanks; thus, it provided a truly continuous antibody capture operation with uninterrupted product mass flow. Continuous virus inactivation and other flow-through unit operations can be readily integrated downstream of the capture step to create truly continuous, integrated, downstream antibody processing without the need for hold tanks.

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