6533b826fe1ef96bd1283c89

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ultra-short ion-exchange columns for fast charge variants analysis of therapeutic proteins

Szabolcs FeketeMatthew A. LauberJennifer M. NguyenDavy GuillarmeAlain BeckJ.a. Navarro-huertaAmarande Murisier

subject

Monoclonal antibodyChromatography Reverse-PhaseRange (particle radiation)ddc:615ChromatographyIon exchangeChemistryElutionOrganic ChemistryIon chromatographyIon-exchange chromatographyGeneral MedicineReversed-phase chromatographyChromatography Ion ExchangeBiochemistryUltra-short columnExtra-column volumeAnalytical ChemistryVolume (thermodynamics)PeekPorosityFast separationPorosityChromatography High Pressure Liquid

description

Abstract The purpose of this work was to study the potential of recently developed ultra-short column hardware for ion exchange chromatography (IEX). Various prototype and commercial columns having lengths of 5, 10, 15, 20 and 50 mm and packed with non-porous 3 µm particles were systematically compared. Both pH and salt gradient modes of elution were evaluated. Similarly, what has been previously reported for reversed phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) mode, an “on-off” retention mechanism was observed in IEX for therapeutic proteins and their fragments (25–150 kDa range). Because of the non-porous nature of the IEX packing material, the column porosity was relatively low (e = 0.42) and therefore the volumes of ultra-short columns were very small. Based on this observation, it was important to reduce as much as possible all the sources of extra-column volumes (i.e. injection volume, extra-bed volume, detector cell volume and connector tubing volume), to limit peak broadening. With a fully optimized UHPLC system, very fast separations of intact and IdeS digested mAb products were successfully performed in about 1 min using an IEX column with dimensions of 15 × 2.1 mm. This column was selected for high-throughput separations, since it probably offers the best compromise between efficiency and analysis time. For such ultra-fast separations, PEEK tubing was applied to bypass the column oven (column directly connected) to the optical detector via a zero dead volume connection.

10.1016/j.chroma.2021.462568https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:155482