The virus removal of protein A affinity chromatography, inactivation capacity, acid pH and a combination of high temperature with a chaotropic agent was determined in this work. The model viruses studied were sendaivirus, human immunodeficency virus (HIV-IIIb), human poliovirus type-II, human herpesvirus I and canine parvovirus. The protein A affinity chromatography showed a maximum reduction factor of 8 logs in the case of viruses larger than 120 nm size, while for small viruses (18-30 nm) the maximum reduction factor was about 5 logs. Non viral inactivation was observed during the monoclonal antibody elution step. Low pH treatment showed a maximum inactivation factor of 7.1 logs for enveloped viruses. However, a weak inactivation factor (3.4 logs) was obtained for DNA nonenveloped viruses. The combination of high temperature with 3 M KSCN showed a high inactivation factor for all of the viruses studied. The total clearance factor was 23.1, 15.1, 13.6, 20.0 and 16.0 logs for sendaivirus, HIV-IIIb, human poliovirus type-II, human herpesvirus I and canine parvovirus, respectively.
Recombinant hepatitis B surface antigen (r-HBsAg) produced in yeast is adsorbed on a diatomaceous earth matrix for purification purposes. A pH dependence in the adsorption-elution behavior was found. The capacity of celite (Hyflo Super Cei) for adsorbing r-HBsAg increased with decreasing pH. Nonspecific proteins were also adsorbed, but a low pH dependence was found. Elution from the matrix was performed using a basic pH buffer, in which r-HBsAg is more specifically adsorbed/desorbed than contaminant proteins, permitting the purification of the r-HBsAg. A pH of 4.0 was used for adsorption and pH 8.2 was used for desorption. The described protocol allows a purification factor between three- and fivefold with respect to contaminant proteins and sixfold with respect to contaminant DNA. Finally, the adsorption step was successfully scaled-up for production purposes.
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