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Multidimensional Protein Solubility Optimization with an Ultrahigh-Throughput Microfluidic Platform

[Image: see text] Protein-based biologics are highly suitable for drug development as they exhibit low toxicity and high specificity for their targets. However, for therapeutic applications, biologics must often be formulated to elevated concentrations, making insufficient solubility a critical bott...

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Autores principales: Erkamp, Nadia A., Oeller, Marc, Sneideris, Tomas, Ausserwoger, Hannes, Levin, Aviad, Welsh, Timothy J., Qi, Runzhang, Qian, Daoyuan, Lorenzen, Nikolai, Zhu, Hongjia, Sormanni, Pietro, Vendruscolo, Michele, Knowles, Tuomas P.J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10061369/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36930285
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c05495
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author Erkamp, Nadia A.
Oeller, Marc
Sneideris, Tomas
Ausserwoger, Hannes
Levin, Aviad
Welsh, Timothy J.
Qi, Runzhang
Qian, Daoyuan
Lorenzen, Nikolai
Zhu, Hongjia
Sormanni, Pietro
Vendruscolo, Michele
Knowles, Tuomas P.J.
author_facet Erkamp, Nadia A.
Oeller, Marc
Sneideris, Tomas
Ausserwoger, Hannes
Levin, Aviad
Welsh, Timothy J.
Qi, Runzhang
Qian, Daoyuan
Lorenzen, Nikolai
Zhu, Hongjia
Sormanni, Pietro
Vendruscolo, Michele
Knowles, Tuomas P.J.
author_sort Erkamp, Nadia A.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Protein-based biologics are highly suitable for drug development as they exhibit low toxicity and high specificity for their targets. However, for therapeutic applications, biologics must often be formulated to elevated concentrations, making insufficient solubility a critical bottleneck in the drug development pipeline. Here, we report an ultrahigh-throughput microfluidic platform for protein solubility screening. In comparison with previous methods, this microfluidic platform can make, incubate, and measure samples in a few minutes, uses just 20 μg of protein (>10-fold improvement), and yields 10,000 data points (1000-fold improvement). This allows quantitative comparison of formulation excipients, such as sodium chloride, polysorbate, histidine, arginine, and sucrose. Additionally, we can measure how solubility is affected by the combinatorial effect of multiple additives, find a suitable pH for the formulation, and measure the impact of mutations on solubility, thus enabling the screening of large libraries. By reducing material and time costs, this approach makes detailed multidimensional solubility optimization experiments possible, streamlining drug development and increasing our understanding of biotherapeutic solubility and the effects of excipients.
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spelling pubmed-100613692023-03-31 Multidimensional Protein Solubility Optimization with an Ultrahigh-Throughput Microfluidic Platform Erkamp, Nadia A. Oeller, Marc Sneideris, Tomas Ausserwoger, Hannes Levin, Aviad Welsh, Timothy J. Qi, Runzhang Qian, Daoyuan Lorenzen, Nikolai Zhu, Hongjia Sormanni, Pietro Vendruscolo, Michele Knowles, Tuomas P.J. Anal Chem [Image: see text] Protein-based biologics are highly suitable for drug development as they exhibit low toxicity and high specificity for their targets. However, for therapeutic applications, biologics must often be formulated to elevated concentrations, making insufficient solubility a critical bottleneck in the drug development pipeline. Here, we report an ultrahigh-throughput microfluidic platform for protein solubility screening. In comparison with previous methods, this microfluidic platform can make, incubate, and measure samples in a few minutes, uses just 20 μg of protein (>10-fold improvement), and yields 10,000 data points (1000-fold improvement). This allows quantitative comparison of formulation excipients, such as sodium chloride, polysorbate, histidine, arginine, and sucrose. Additionally, we can measure how solubility is affected by the combinatorial effect of multiple additives, find a suitable pH for the formulation, and measure the impact of mutations on solubility, thus enabling the screening of large libraries. By reducing material and time costs, this approach makes detailed multidimensional solubility optimization experiments possible, streamlining drug development and increasing our understanding of biotherapeutic solubility and the effects of excipients. American Chemical Society 2023-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10061369/ /pubmed/36930285 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c05495 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Erkamp, Nadia A.
Oeller, Marc
Sneideris, Tomas
Ausserwoger, Hannes
Levin, Aviad
Welsh, Timothy J.
Qi, Runzhang
Qian, Daoyuan
Lorenzen, Nikolai
Zhu, Hongjia
Sormanni, Pietro
Vendruscolo, Michele
Knowles, Tuomas P.J.
Multidimensional Protein Solubility Optimization with an Ultrahigh-Throughput Microfluidic Platform
title Multidimensional Protein Solubility Optimization with an Ultrahigh-Throughput Microfluidic Platform
title_full Multidimensional Protein Solubility Optimization with an Ultrahigh-Throughput Microfluidic Platform
title_fullStr Multidimensional Protein Solubility Optimization with an Ultrahigh-Throughput Microfluidic Platform
title_full_unstemmed Multidimensional Protein Solubility Optimization with an Ultrahigh-Throughput Microfluidic Platform
title_short Multidimensional Protein Solubility Optimization with an Ultrahigh-Throughput Microfluidic Platform
title_sort multidimensional protein solubility optimization with an ultrahigh-throughput microfluidic platform
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10061369/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36930285
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c05495
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