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Nonnative aggregation of an IgG1 antibody in acidic conditions: Part 1. Unfolding, colloidal interactions, and formation of high-molecular-weight aggregates

โœ Scribed by Rebecca K. Brummitt; Douglas P. Nesta; Liuquan Chang; Susan F. Chase; Thomas M. Laue; Christopher J. Roberts


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
443 KB
Volume
100
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3549

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โœฆ Synopsis


Monomeric and aggregated states of an IgG1 antibody were characterized under acidic conditions as a function of solution pH (3.5-5.5). A combination of intrinsic/extrinsic fluorescence (FL), circular dichroism, calorimetry, chromatography, capillary electrophoresis, and laser light scattering were used to characterize unfolding, refolding, native colloidal interactions, aggregate structure and morphology, and aggregate dissociation. Lower pH led to larger net repulsive colloidal interactions, decreased thermal stability of Fc and Fab regions, and increased solubility of thermally accelerated aggregates. Unfolding of the Fab domains, and possibly the CH3 domain, was inferred as a key step in the formation of aggregation-prone monomers. High-molecular-weight soluble aggregates displayed nonnative secondary structure, had a semi-rigid chain morphology, and bound thioflavin T (ThT), consistent with at least a portion of the monomer forming amyloid-like structures. Soluble aggregates also formed during monomer refolding under conditions moving from high to low denaturant concentrations. Both thermally and chemically induced aggregates showed similar ThT binding and secondary structural changes, and were noncovalent based on dissociation in concentrated guanidine hydrochloride solutions. Changes in intrinsic FL during chemical versus thermal unfolding suggest a greater degree of structural change during chemical unfolding, although aggregation proceeded through partially unfolded monomers in both cases.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Nonnative aggregation of an IgG1 antibod
โœ Rebecca K. Brummitt; Douglas P. Nesta; Liuquan Chang; Andrew M. Kroetsch; Christ ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2011 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 666 KB

Aggregation mechanisms as a function of pH were assessed for the IgG1 antibody described in Part 1 (Brummitt RK, Nesta DP, Chang L, Chase SF, Laue TM, Roberts CJ. Non-native aggregation of an IGG1 antibody in acidic conditions: 1. Unfolding, colloidal interactions, and high molecular weight aggregat