Static light scattering (SLS) was used to characterize five monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) as a function of total ionic strength (TIS) at pH values between 5.5 and 7.0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrostatically driven attractions between proteins can result in issues for therapeutic protein formulations such as solubility limits, aggregation, and high solution viscosity. Previous work showed that a model monoclonal antibody displayed large and potentially problematic electrostatically driven attractions at typical pH (5-8) and ionic strength conditions (∼10-100 mM). Molecular simulations of a hybrid coarse-grained model (1bC/D, one bead per charged site and per domain) were used to predict potential point mutations to identify key charge changes (charge-to-neutral or charge-swap) that could greatly reduce the net attractive protein-protein self-interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of coarse-grained models for molecular simulation of proteins are considered, with emphasis on the application of predicting protein-protein self-interactions for monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). As an illustrative example and for quantitative comparison, the models are used to predict osmotic virial coefficients over a broad range of attractive and repulsive self-interactions and solution conditions for a series of MAbs where the second osmotic virial coefficient has been experimentally determined in prior work. The models are compared based on how well they can predict experimental behavior, their computational burdens, and scalability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAttractive electrostatic protein-protein interactions (PPI) necessarily involve identifying oppositely charged regions of the protein surface that interact favorably. This cannot be done reliably if one only considers a single protein in isolation unless there are obvious charge "patches" that result in extreme molecular dipoles. Prior work [ 2019 , 108 , 120 - 132 ] identified three monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) that displayed experimental behavior ranging from net repulsive to strongly attractive electrostatic interactions.
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