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Characterization of antibody surface properties and selection of a diverse subset for development of a generic size-exclusion chromatography method.

Aggregates are an important quality attribute for biotherapeutics because they can affect the safety and efficacy of the drug and they are therefore routinely monitored, mainly with size-exclusion chromatography (SEC). However, there is often a need to tailor a SEC method to a specific molecule. This study describes the development of a generic SEC method tested on 138 antibodies with the variable domains taken from clinical stage antibodies. We report on the discovery of a subset of 12 antibodies that represents the full range of physiochemical properties found in the 138 antibodies. This subset is shown to be an efficient and reliable test set when developing chromatographic methods for antibodies. An understanding of the nature of the analyte-stationary phase interactions was gained when using this set with its wide range of physiochemical properties. Highly hydrophobic antibodies interact strongly with some modern silica hybrid materials causing the elution time to increase significantly, while a hydrophilically modified hybrid surface showed highly reduced interactions for the hydrophobic antibodies. Highly hydrophilic antibodies, on the other hand, exhibited asymmetric peaks to a certain extent on all stationary phases, while the elution time was not affected. The developed SEC method was shown to have satisfactory performance in terms of linearity, repeatability, range, and accuracy and exhibit very narrow distributions of elution time and peak symmetry when testing the 138 antibodies indicating its generic performance.

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