Wright Evan, Kawka Karina, Medina Maria Fe C, Latulippe David R
Department of Chemical Engineering, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L7, Canada.
Robert E. Fitzhenry Vector Laboratory, McMaster Immunology Research Centre, Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4K1, Canada.
Membranes (Basel). 2022 Mar 24;12(4):359. doi: 10.3390/membranes12040359.
Efficient downstream processing represents a significant challenge in the rapidly developing field of therapeutic viruses. While it is known that the terminal sterile filtration step can be a major cause of product loss, there is little known about the effect of host cell impurities (DNA and protein) on filtration performance. In this study, fractions of relatively pure Vero host cell protein and DNA were spiked into a highly pure preparation of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). Then, the resulting solutions were sterile filtered using two commercially available 0.22 µm rated microfiltration membranes. A combination of transmembrane pressure measurements, virus recovery measurements, and post-filtration microscopy images of the microfiltration membranes was used to evaluate the sterile filtration performance. It was found that increasing the amount of host cell protein from approximately 1 µg/mL (in the un-spiked VSV preparation) to 25 µg/mL resulted in a greater extent of membrane fouling, causing the VSV recovery to decrease from 89% to 65% in experiments conducted with the highly asymmetric Express PLUS PES membrane and to go as low as 48% in experiments conducted with the symmetric Durapore PVDF membrane. Similar effects were not seen when bovine serum albumin, a common model protein used in filtration studies, was spiked into the VSV preparation, which indicates that the sterile filtration performance is critically dependent on the complex composition of the mixture of host cell proteins rather than the presence of any protein. The results presented in this work provide important insights into the role of host cell impurities on the performance of sterile filtration processes for therapeutic viruses.
在快速发展的治疗性病毒领域,高效的下游加工是一项重大挑战。虽然已知终端无菌过滤步骤可能是产品损失的主要原因,但关于宿主细胞杂质(DNA和蛋白质)对过滤性能的影响却知之甚少。在本研究中,将相对纯净的Vero宿主细胞蛋白质和DNA组分添加到高度纯净的水疱性口炎病毒(VSV)制剂中。然后,使用两种市售的额定孔径为0.22 µm的微滤膜对所得溶液进行无菌过滤。通过跨膜压力测量、病毒回收率测量以及微滤膜的过滤后显微镜图像相结合的方式来评估无菌过滤性能。结果发现,将宿主细胞蛋白质的量从大约1 µg/mL(在未添加的VSV制剂中)增加到25 µg/mL会导致更大程度的膜污染,在使用高度不对称的Express PLUS PES膜进行的实验中,VSV回收率从89%降至65%,而在使用对称的Durapore PVDF膜进行的实验中则低至48%。当将过滤研究中常用的模型蛋白牛血清白蛋白添加到VSV制剂中时,未观察到类似的效果,这表明无菌过滤性能关键取决于宿主细胞蛋白质混合物的复杂组成,而非任何蛋白质的存在。这项工作中呈现的结果为宿主细胞杂质在治疗性病毒无菌过滤过程性能中的作用提供了重要见解。