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1.
Viruses ; 16(3)2024 03 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38543791

ABSTRACT

(1) Recombinant protein production in mammalian cells is either based on transient transfection processes, often inefficient and underlying high batch-to-batch variability, or on laborious generation of stable cell lines. Alternatively, BacMam, a transduction process using the baculovirus, can be employed. (2) Six transfecting agents were compared to baculovirus transduction in terms of transient and stable protein expression characteristics of the model protein ACE2-eGFP using HEK293-6E, CHO-K1, and Vero cell lines. Furthermore, process optimization such as expression enhancement using sodium butyrate and TSA or baculovirus purification was assessed. (3) Baculovirus transduction efficiency was superior to all transfection agents for all cell lines. Transduced protein expression was moderate, but an 18-fold expression increase was achieved using the enhancer sodium butyrate. Ultracentrifugation of baculovirus from a 3.5 L bioreactor significantly improved the transduction efficiency and protein expression. Stable cell lines were obtained with each baculovirus transduction, yet stable cell line generation after transfection was highly unreliable. (4) This study demonstrated the superiority of the BacMam platform to standard transfections. The baculovirus efficiently transduced an array of cell lines both transiently and stably and achieved the highest efficiency for all tested cell lines. The feasibility of the scale-up of baculovirus production was demonstrated and the possibility of baculovirus purification was successfully explored.


Subject(s)
Baculoviridae , Genetic Vectors , Animals , Humans , Butyric Acid , HEK293 Cells , Genetic Vectors/genetics , Baculoviridae/genetics , Baculoviridae/metabolism , Plasmids/genetics , Mammals
2.
Biotechnol Prog ; 39(4): e3342, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36974026

ABSTRACT

Host cell DNA is a critical impurity in downstream processing of enveloped viruses. Especially, DNA in the form of chromatin is often neglected. Endonuclease treatment is an almost mandatory step in manufacturing of viral vaccines. In order to find the optimal performer, four different endonucleases, two of them salt tolerant, were evaluated in downstream processing of recombinant measles virus. Endonuclease treatment was performed under optimal temperature conditions after clarification and before the purification by flow-through chromatography with a core shell chromatography medium: Capto™ Core 700. Virus infectivity was measured by TCID50. DNA and histone presence in process and purified samples was determined using PicoGreen™ assay and Western blot analysis using an anti-histone antibody, respectively. All tested endonucleases allowed the reduction of DNA content improving product purity. The salt-tolerant endonucleases SAN and M-SAN were more efficient in the removal of chromatin compared with the non-salt-tolerant endonucleases Benzonase® and DENARASE®. Removal of chromatin using M-SAN was also possible without the addition of extra salt to the cell culture supernatant. The combination of the endonuclease treatment, using salt-tolerant endonucleases with flow-through chromatography, using core-shell particles, resulted in high purity and purification efficiency. This strategy has all features for a platform downstream process of recombinant measles virus and beyond.


Subject(s)
Chromatin , Measles virus , Chromatin/genetics , Measles virus/genetics , Endonucleases/genetics , Histones , DNA
3.
Vaccine ; 40(9): 1323-1333, 2022 02 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35094870

ABSTRACT

Purification of very large and complex, enveloped viruses, such as measles virus is very challenging, it must be performed in a closed system because the final product cannot be sterile filtered and often loss of virus titer and poor product purity has been observed. We developed a purification process where the clarified and endonuclease treated culture supernatant is loaded on a restricted access chromatography medium where small impurities are bound and the virus is collected in the flow-through, which is then concentrated, and buffer exchanged by ultra/diafiltration. Up to 98.5% of host cell proteins could be captured by direct loading of clarified and endonuclease treated cell culture supernatant. Reproducible process performance and scalability of the chromatography step were demonstrated from small to pilot scale, including loading volumes from 50 mL up to 9 L. A 10-fold virus concentration was achieved by the ultrafiltration using a 100 kDa flat-sheet membrane. The order of individual process steps had a large impact on the virus infectivity and total process yields. The developed process maintained virus infectivity and is twice as fast as the traditional process train, where concentration is performed before loading on the chromatography column. Capturing impurities by the restricted access medium makes it a platform purification process with a high flexibility, which can be easily and quickly adapted to other vectors based on the measles virus vector platform.


Subject(s)
Measles virus , Viral Vaccines , Cell Culture Techniques , Chromatography , Culture Media
4.
Talanta ; 235: 122691, 2021 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34517577

ABSTRACT

The nucleocapsid protein (NP) of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is critical for several steps of the viral life cycle, and is abundantly expressed during infection, making it an ideal diagnostic target protein. This protein has a strong tendency for dimerization and interaction with nucleic acids. For the first time, high titers of NP were expressed in E. coli with a CASPON tag, using a growth-decoupled protein expression system. Purification was accomplished by nuclease treatment of the cell homogenate and a sequence of downstream processing (DSP) steps. An analytical method consisting of native hydrophobic interaction chromatography hyphenated to multi-angle light scattering detection (HIC-MALS) was established for in-process control, in particular, to monitor product fragmentation and multimerization throughout the purification process. 730 mg purified NP per liter of fermentation could be produced by the optimized process, corresponding to a yield of 77% after cell lysis. The HIC-MALS method was used to demonstrate that the NP product can be produced with a purity of 95%. The molecular mass of the main NP fraction is consistent with dimerized protein as was verified by a complementary native size-exclusion separation (SEC)-MALS analysis. Peptide mapping mass spectrometry and host cell specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay confirmed the high product purity, and the presence of a minor endogenous chaperone explained the residual impurities. The optimized HIC-MALS method enables monitoring of the product purity, and simultaneously access its molecular mass, providing orthogonal information complementary to established SEC-MALS methods. Enhanced resolving power can be achieved over SEC, attributed to the extended variables to tune selectivity in HIC mode.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Nucleocapsid Proteins , Chromatography , Escherichia coli/genetics , Humans , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Nucleocapsid Proteins/genetics , SARS-CoV-2
5.
J Chromatogr A ; 1627: 461378, 2020 Sep 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32823092

ABSTRACT

Downstream processing (DSP) of large bionanoparticles is still a challenge. The present study aims to systematically compare some of the most commonly used DSP strategies for capture and purification of enveloped viruses and virus-like particles (eVLPs) by using the same staring material and analytical tools. As a model, Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 (HIV-1) gag VLPs produced in CHO cells were used. Four different DSP strategies were tested. An anion-exchange monolith and a membrane adsorber, for direct capture and purification of eVLPs, and a polymer-grafted anion-exchange resin and a heparin-affinity resin for eVLP purification after a first flow-through step to remove small impurities. All tested strategies were suitable for capture and purification of eVLPs. The performance of the different strategies was evaluated regarding its binding capacity, ability to separate different particle populations and product purity. The highest binding capacity regarding total particles was obtained using the anion exchange membrane adsorber (5.3 × 1012 part/mL membrane), however this method did not allow the separation of different particle populations. Despite having a lower binding capacity (1.5 × 1011 part/mL column) and requiring a pre-processing step with flow-through chromatography, Heparin-affinity chromatography showed the best performance regarding separation of different particle populations, allowing not only the separation of HIV-1 gag VLPs from host cell derived bionanoparticles but also from chromatin. This work additionally shows the importance of thorough sample characterization combining several biochemical and biophysical methods in eVLP DSP.


Subject(s)
Convection , HIV-1/isolation & purification , Adsorption , Animals , Anions , CHO Cells , Chromatin/metabolism , Chromatography, Affinity , Cricetinae , Cricetulus , HIV-1/ultrastructure , Histones/metabolism , Humans , Microspheres , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Nanoparticles/ultrastructure , Polymers/chemistry , Porosity , Virion/isolation & purification , Virion/ultrastructure
6.
J Sep Sci ; 43(12): 2270-2278, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32187844

ABSTRACT

The baculovirus expression vector system is a very powerful tool to produce virus-like particles and gene-therapy vectors, but the removal of coexpressed baculovirus has been a major barrier for wider industrial use. We used chimeric human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) gag influenza-hemagglutin virus-like particles produced in Tnms42 insect cells using the baculovirus insect cell expression vector system as model virus-like particles. A fast and simple purification method for these virus-like particles with direct capture and purification within one chromatography step was developed. The insect cell culture supernatant was treated with endonuclease and filtered, before it was directly loaded onto a polymer-grafted anion exchanger and eluted by a linear salt gradient. A 4.3 log clearance of baculovirus from virus-like particles was achieved. The absence of the baculovirus capsid protein (vp39) in the product fraction was additionally shown by high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. When considering a vaccination dose of 109 particles, 4200 doses can be purified per L pretreated supernatant, meeting the requirements for vaccines with <10 ng double-stranded DNA per dose and 3.4 µg protein per dose in a single step. The process is simple with a very low number of handling steps and has the characteristics to become a platform for purification of these types of virus-like particles.


Subject(s)
Baculoviridae/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/isolation & purification , Animals , Anions/chemistry , Cells, Cultured , Chromatography, Ion Exchange , Humans , gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/chemistry
7.
Vaccine ; 37(47): 7070-7080, 2019 11 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31300289

ABSTRACT

Polymer-grafted chromatography media, especially ion exchangers, are high performance materials for protein purification. However, due to the pore size limitation, conventional chromatography beads are usually not considered for the downstream processing of large biomolecules such as virus-like particles (VLPs). Contrariwise, since the outer surface of the chromatography beads provides satisfactory binding capacity for VLPs and impurities of smaller size can bind inside of the beads, conventional porous beads should be considered for VLP capture and purification. We used HIV-1 gag VLPs with a diameter of 100-200 nm as a model to demonstrate that polymer-grafted anion exchangers are suitable for the purification of bionanoparticles. The equilibrium binding capacity was 1 × 1013 part/mL resin. Moderate salt concentration up to 100 mM NaCl did not affect binding, allowing direct loading of cell culture supernatant onto the column for purification. Dynamic binding capacity at 10% breakthrough, when loading cell culture supernatant, was approximately 6 × 1011 part/mL column; only 1-log lower than for monoliths. Endonuclease treatment of the cell culture supernatant did not increase the dynamic binding capacity, suggesting that dsDNA does not compete for the binding sites of VLPs. Nevertheless, due to simultaneous elution of particles and dsDNA, endonuclease treatment is required to reduce dsDNA contamination in the product. Proteomic analysis revealed that HIV-1 gag VLPs contain different host cell proteins in their cargo. This cargo is composed of conserved proteins and other proteins that vary from one particle population to another, as well as from batch to batch. This process allowed the separation of different particle populations. HIV-1 gag VLPs were directly captured and purified from cell culture supernatant with a total particle recovery in the elution of about 35%. Columns packed with beads can be scaled to practically any dimension and therefore a tailored design of the process is possible.


Subject(s)
HIV-1/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle/chemistry , gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/chemistry , Animals , CHO Cells , Cell Culture Techniques , Chromatography, Affinity/methods , Cricetulus , HIV Seropositivity/immunology
8.
J Sep Sci ; 42(16): 2640-2649, 2019 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31169979

ABSTRACT

At-line static light scattering and fluorescence monitoring allows direct in-process tracking of fluorescent virus-like particles. We have demonstrated this by coupling at-line multi-angle light scattering and fluorescence detectors to the downstream processing of enveloped virus-like particles. Since light scattering intensity is directly proportional to particle concentration, our strategy allowed a swift identification of product containing fractions and rapid process development. Virus-like particles containing the Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Gag protein fused to the Green Fluorescence protein were produced in Human Embryonic Kidney 293 cells by transient transfection. A single-column anion-exchange chromatography method was used for direct capture and purification. The majority of host-cell protein impurities passed through the column without binding. Virus-like particles bound to the column were eluted by linear or step salt gradients. Particles recovered in the step gradient purification were characterized by nanoparticle tracking analysis, size exclusion chromatography coupled to multi-angle light scattering and fluorescence detectors and transmission electron microscopy. A total recovery of 66% for the fluorescent particles was obtained with a 50% yield in the main product peak. Virus-like particles were concentrated 17-fold to final a concentration of 4.45 × 1010 particles/mL. Simple buffers and operation make this process suitable for large scale purposes.


Subject(s)
Light , Virion/isolation & purification , gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/isolation & purification , Cells, Cultured , Chromatography , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Scattering, Radiation , Virion/chemistry , gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/chemistry
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