Making use of a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM), concentrated solutions of therapeutic antibodies were studied with respect to their behavior under shear excitation with frequencies in the MHz range. At high protein concentration and neutral pH, viscoelastic behavior was found in the sense that the storage modulus, G', was nonzero. Fits of the frequency dependence of G'(ω) and G''(ω) (G'' being the loss modulus) using the Maxwell-model produced good agreement with the experimental data. The fit parameters were the relaxation time, τ, and the shear modulus at the inverse relaxation time, G* (at the "cross-over frequency" ω = 1/τ). The influence of two different pharmaceutical excipients (histidine and citrate) was studied at variable concentrations of the antibody and variable pH. In cases, where viscoelasticity was observed, G* was in the range of a few kPa, consistent with entropy-driven interactions. τ was small at low pH, where the antibody carries a positive charge. τ increased with increasing pH. The relaxation time τ was found to be correlated with other parameters quantifying protein-protein interactions, namely the steady shear viscosity (η), the second osmotic virial coefficient as determined with both self-interaction chromatography (B) and static light scattering (B), and the diffusion interaction parameter as determined with dynamic light scattering (k). While B and k describe protein-protein interactions in diluted samples, the QCM can be applied to concentrated solutions, thereby being sensitive to higher-order protein-protein interactions.
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are often needed and applied in high concentration solutions, >100 mg/mL. Due to close intermolecular distances between mAbs at high concentrations (~10-20 nm at 200 mg/mL), intermolecular interactions between mAbs and mAbs and solvent/co-solute molecules become non-negligible. Here, EPR spectroscopy is used to study the high-concentration solutions of mAbs and their effect on co-solvated small molecules, using EPR “spin probing” assay in aqueous and buffered solutions. Such, information regarding the surrounding environments of mAbs at high concentrations were obtained and comparisons between EPR-obtained micro-viscosities (rotational correlation times) and macroscopic viscosities measured by rheology were possible. In comparison with highly viscous systems like glycerol-water mixtures, it was found that up to concentrations of 50 mg/mL, the mAb-spin probe systems have similar trends in their macro- (rheology) and micro-viscosities (EPR), whereas at very high concentrations they deviate strongly. The charged spin probes sense an almost unchanged aqueous solution even at very high concentrations, which in turn indicates the existence of large solvent regions that despite their proximity to large mAbs essentially offer pure water reservoirs for co-solvated charged molecules. In contrast, in buffered solutions, amphiphilic spin probes like TEMPO interact with the mAb network, due to slight charge screening. The application of EPR spectroscopy in the present work has enabled us to observe and discriminate between electrostatic and hydrophobic kinds of interactions and depict the potential underlying mechanisms of network formation at high concentrations of mAbs. These findings could be of importance as well for the development of liquid-liquid phase separations often observed in highly concentrated protein solutions.
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