Opalescence and high viscosities can pose challenges for high concentration formulation of antibodies. Both phenomena result from protein-protein intermolecular interactions that can be modulated with solution ionic strength. We studied a therapeutic monoclonal antibody that exhibits high viscosity in solutions at low ionic strength (~20 centipoise (cP) at 90 mg/mL and 23°C) and significant opalescence at isotonic ionic strength (approximately 100 nephelometric turbidity units at 90 mg/mL and 23°C). The intermolecular interactions responsible for these effects were characterized using membrane osmometry, static light scattering and zeta potential measurements. The net protein-protein interactions were repulsive at low ionic strength (~4 mM) and attractive at isotonic ionic strengths. The high viscosities are attributed to electroviscous forces at low ionic strength and the significant opalescence at isotonic ionic strength is correlated with attractive antibody interactions. Furthermore there appears to be a connection to critical phenomena and it is suggested that the extent of opalescence is dependent on the proximity to the critical point. We demonstrate that by balancing the repulsive and attractive forces via intermediate ionic strengths and by increasing the mAb concentration above the apparent critical concentration both opalescence and viscosity can be simultaneously minimized.
This work examines the effect of three anions from the Hofmeister series (sulfate, chloride, and thiocyanate) on the conformational stability and aggregation rate of an IgG1 monoclonal antibody (mAb) and corresponding changes in the mAb's backbone flexibility (at pH 6 and 25 °C). Compared to a 0.1 M NaCl control, thiocyanate (0.5 M) decreased the melting temperatures (Tm) for three observed conformational transitions within the mAb by 6-9 °C, as measured by differential scanning calorimetry. Thiocyanate also accelerated the rate of monomer loss at 40 °C over 12 months, as monitored by size exclusion chromatography. Backbone flexibility, as measured via H/D exchange mass spectrometry, increased in two segments in the CH2 domain with more subtle changes across several additional regions. Chloride (0.5 M) caused slight increases in the Tm values, small changes in aggregation rate, and minimal yet consistent decreases in flexibility across various domains with larger effects noted within the VL, CH1, and CH3 domains. In contrast, 0.5 M sulfate increased Tm values, had small stabilizing influences on aggregate formation over time, yet substantially increased the flexibility of two specific regions in the CH1 and VL domains. While thiocyanate-induced conformational destabilization of the mAb correlated with increased local flexibility of specific regions in the CH2 domain (especially residues 241-251 in the heavy chain), the stabilizing anion sulfate did not affect these CH2 regions.
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