AI Article Synopsis

  • Viral vectors like adenovirus are important for vaccines and gene therapy, but producing high-quality virus is challenging due to their size and stability differences compared to therapeutic proteins.
  • The study focuses on a cellulose nanofiber ion-exchange sorbent with quaternary amine ligands that offers a large surface area and fast processing times; it examines how different ligand densities affect virus recovery and stability.
  • Results indicate that higher ligand densities can reduce product stability, but this can be addressed by increasing flow rates to shorten adsorption times, while also optimizing separation resolution and maintaining a good virus quality ratio.

Article Abstract

Viral vectors such as adenovirus have successful applications in vaccines and gene therapy but the manufacture of the high-quality virus remains a challenge. It is desirable to use the adsorption-based chromatographic separations that so effectively underpin the therapeutic protein manufacture. However fundamental differences in the size and stability of this class of product mean it is necessary to revisit the design of sorbent's morphology and surface chemistry. In this study, the behaviour of a cellulose nanofiber ion-exchange sorbent derivatised with quaternary amine ligands at defined densities is characterised to address this. This material was selected as it has a large accessible surface area for viral particles and rapid process times. Initially, the impact of surface chemistry on infective product recovery using low (440 µmol/g), medium (750 µmol/g), and high (1029 µmol/g) ligand densities is studied. At higher densities product stability is reduced, this effect increased with prolonged adsorption durations of 24 min with just ~10% loss at low ligand density versus ~50% at high. This could be mitigated by using a high flow rate to reduce the cycle time to ~1 min. Next, the impact of ligand density on the separation's resolution was evaluated. Key to understanding virus quality is the virus particle: infectious virus particle ratio. It was found this parameter could be manipulated using ligand density and elution strategy. Together this provides a basis for viral vector separations that allows for their typically low titres and labile nature by using high liquid velocity to minimise both load and on-column times while separating key product and process-related impurities.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bit.26972DOI Listing

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