Measurement of the second osmotic virial coefficient for protein solutions exhibiting monomer-dimer equilibrium |
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Authors: | Alford John R Kendrick Brent S Carpenter John F Randolph Theodore W |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA b Amgen Inc., Longmont, CO 80503, USA c Department of Pharmaceutical Science, School of Pharmacy, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262, USA |
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Abstract: | The second osmotic virial coefficient (B) is a measure of solution nonideality that is useful for predicting conditions favorable for protein crystallization and for inhibition of aggregation. Static light scattering is the technique most commonly used to determine B values, typically using protein concentrations less than 5 mg/mL. During static light scattering experiments at low protein concentrations, frequently the protein is assumed to exist either as a single nonassociating species or as a combination of assembly states independent of protein concentration. In the work described here, we examined the limit for ignoring weak reversible dimerization (Kd > or =1 mM) by comparing B values calculated with and without accounting for self-association. Light scattering effects for equilibrium dimer systems with Kd <20 mM and Kd <1 mM will significantly affect apparent B values measured for 20 and 150-kDa proteins, respectively. To interpret correctly light scattering data for monomer-dimer equilibrium systems, we use an expanded coefficient model to account for separate monomer-monomer (B(22)), monomer-dimer (B(23)), and dimer-dimer (B(33)) interactions. |
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Keywords: | Concentrated protein formulations Self-association Low-angle light scattering |
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