4.5 Article

Preparation of Protein A Membrane Adsorbers Using Strain-Promoted, Copper-Free Dibenzocyclooctyne (DBCO)-Azide Click Chemistry

Journal

MEMBRANES
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/membranes13100824

Keywords

Protein A; membrane chromatography; alkyne-azide; copper-free click chemistry; antibody purification

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Protein A chromatography is the preferred method for purifying Fc-based proteins, and convective chromatography technologies such as membrane adsorbers can improve throughput. This study demonstrates the use of copper-free click chemistry to prepare Protein A membranes, which showed high binding capacity and concentration for polyclonal human immunoglobulins (hIgG).
Protein A chromatography is the preferred unit operation for purifying Fc-based proteins. Convective chromatography technologies, like membrane adsorbers, can perform the purification rapidly and improve throughput dramatically. While the literature reports the preparation of Protein A membrane adsorbers utilizing traditional coupling chemistries that target lysine or thiol groups on the Protein A ligand, this study demonstrates a new approach utilizing copper-free dibenzocyclooctyne (DBCO)-azide click chemistry. The synthetic pathway consists of three main steps: bioconjugation of Protein A with a DBCO-polyethylene glycol (PEG) linker, preparation of an azide-functionalized membrane surface, and click reaction of DBCO-Protein A onto the membrane surface. Using polyclonal human immunoglobulins (hIgG) as the target molecule, Protein A membranes prepared by this synthetic pathway showed a flowrate-independent dynamic binding capacity of similar to 10 mg/mL membrane at 10% breakthrough. Fitting of static binding capacity measurements to the Langmuir adsorption isotherm showed a maximum binding (q(max)) of 27.48 +/- 1.31 mg/mL and an apparent equilibrium dissociation constant (K-d) of value of 1.72 x 10(-1) +/- 4.03 x 10(-2) mg/mL. This work represents a new application for copper-less click chemistry in the membrane chromatography space and outlines a synthetic pathway that can be followed for immobilization of other ligands.

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