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Accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid C-terminal ‘C-tag’

Development of bespoke biomanufacturing processes remains a critical bottleneck for translational studies, in particular when modest quantities of a novel product are required for proof-of-concept Phase I/II clinical trials. In these instances the ability to develop a biomanufacturing process quickl...

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Autores principales: Jin, Jing, Hjerrild, Kathryn A., Silk, Sarah E., Brown, Rebecca E., Labbé, Geneviève M., Marshall, Jennifer M., Wright, Katherine E., Bezemer, Sandra, Clemmensen, Stine B., Biswas, Sumi, Li, Yuanyuan, El-Turabi, Aadil, Douglas, Alexander D., Hermans, Pim, Detmers, Frank J., de Jongh, Willem A., Higgins, Matthew K., Ashfield, Rebecca, Draper, Simon J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5482323/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28153778
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2016.12.001
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author Jin, Jing
Hjerrild, Kathryn A.
Silk, Sarah E.
Brown, Rebecca E.
Labbé, Geneviève M.
Marshall, Jennifer M.
Wright, Katherine E.
Bezemer, Sandra
Clemmensen, Stine B.
Biswas, Sumi
Li, Yuanyuan
El-Turabi, Aadil
Douglas, Alexander D.
Hermans, Pim
Detmers, Frank J.
de Jongh, Willem A.
Higgins, Matthew K.
Ashfield, Rebecca
Draper, Simon J.
author_facet Jin, Jing
Hjerrild, Kathryn A.
Silk, Sarah E.
Brown, Rebecca E.
Labbé, Geneviève M.
Marshall, Jennifer M.
Wright, Katherine E.
Bezemer, Sandra
Clemmensen, Stine B.
Biswas, Sumi
Li, Yuanyuan
El-Turabi, Aadil
Douglas, Alexander D.
Hermans, Pim
Detmers, Frank J.
de Jongh, Willem A.
Higgins, Matthew K.
Ashfield, Rebecca
Draper, Simon J.
author_sort Jin, Jing
collection PubMed
description Development of bespoke biomanufacturing processes remains a critical bottleneck for translational studies, in particular when modest quantities of a novel product are required for proof-of-concept Phase I/II clinical trials. In these instances the ability to develop a biomanufacturing process quickly and relatively cheaply, without risk to product quality or safety, provides a great advantage by allowing new antigens or concepts in immunogen design to more rapidly enter human testing. These challenges with production and purification are particularly apparent when developing recombinant protein-based vaccines for difficult parasitic diseases, with Plasmodium falciparum malaria being a prime example. To that end, we have previously reported the expression of a novel protein vaccine for malaria using the ExpreS(2)Drosophila melanogaster Schneider 2 stable cell line system, however, a very low overall process yield (typically <5% recovery of hexa-histidine-tagged protein) meant the initial purification strategy was not suitable for scale-up and clinical biomanufacture of such a vaccine. Here we describe a newly available affinity purification method that was ideally suited to purification of the same protein which encodes the P. falciparum reticulocyte-binding protein homolog 5 – currently the leading antigen for assessment in next generation vaccines aiming to prevent red blood cell invasion by the blood-stage parasite. This purification system makes use of a C-terminal tag known as ‘C-tag’, composed of the four amino acids, glutamic acid – proline – glutamic acid – alanine (E-P-E-A), which is selectively purified on a CaptureSelect™ affinity resin coupled to a camelid single chain antibody, called NbSyn2. The C-terminal fusion of this short C-tag to P. falciparum reticulocyte-binding protein homolog 5 achieved >85% recovery and >70% purity in a single step purification directly from clarified, concentrated Schneider 2 cell supernatant under mild conditions. Biochemical and immunological analysis showed that the C-tagged and hexa-histidine-tagged P. falciparum reticulocyte-binding protein homolog 5 proteins are comparable. The C-tag technology has the potential to form the basis of a current good manufacturing practice-compliant platform, which could greatly improve the speed and ease with which novel protein-based products progress to clinical testing.
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spelling pubmed-54823232017-06-29 Accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid C-terminal ‘C-tag’ Jin, Jing Hjerrild, Kathryn A. Silk, Sarah E. Brown, Rebecca E. Labbé, Geneviève M. Marshall, Jennifer M. Wright, Katherine E. Bezemer, Sandra Clemmensen, Stine B. Biswas, Sumi Li, Yuanyuan El-Turabi, Aadil Douglas, Alexander D. Hermans, Pim Detmers, Frank J. de Jongh, Willem A. Higgins, Matthew K. Ashfield, Rebecca Draper, Simon J. Int J Parasitol Article Development of bespoke biomanufacturing processes remains a critical bottleneck for translational studies, in particular when modest quantities of a novel product are required for proof-of-concept Phase I/II clinical trials. In these instances the ability to develop a biomanufacturing process quickly and relatively cheaply, without risk to product quality or safety, provides a great advantage by allowing new antigens or concepts in immunogen design to more rapidly enter human testing. These challenges with production and purification are particularly apparent when developing recombinant protein-based vaccines for difficult parasitic diseases, with Plasmodium falciparum malaria being a prime example. To that end, we have previously reported the expression of a novel protein vaccine for malaria using the ExpreS(2)Drosophila melanogaster Schneider 2 stable cell line system, however, a very low overall process yield (typically <5% recovery of hexa-histidine-tagged protein) meant the initial purification strategy was not suitable for scale-up and clinical biomanufacture of such a vaccine. Here we describe a newly available affinity purification method that was ideally suited to purification of the same protein which encodes the P. falciparum reticulocyte-binding protein homolog 5 – currently the leading antigen for assessment in next generation vaccines aiming to prevent red blood cell invasion by the blood-stage parasite. This purification system makes use of a C-terminal tag known as ‘C-tag’, composed of the four amino acids, glutamic acid – proline – glutamic acid – alanine (E-P-E-A), which is selectively purified on a CaptureSelect™ affinity resin coupled to a camelid single chain antibody, called NbSyn2. The C-terminal fusion of this short C-tag to P. falciparum reticulocyte-binding protein homolog 5 achieved >85% recovery and >70% purity in a single step purification directly from clarified, concentrated Schneider 2 cell supernatant under mild conditions. Biochemical and immunological analysis showed that the C-tagged and hexa-histidine-tagged P. falciparum reticulocyte-binding protein homolog 5 proteins are comparable. The C-tag technology has the potential to form the basis of a current good manufacturing practice-compliant platform, which could greatly improve the speed and ease with which novel protein-based products progress to clinical testing. Elsevier Science 2017-06 /pmc/articles/PMC5482323/ /pubmed/28153778 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2016.12.001 Text en © 2017 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Jin, Jing
Hjerrild, Kathryn A.
Silk, Sarah E.
Brown, Rebecca E.
Labbé, Geneviève M.
Marshall, Jennifer M.
Wright, Katherine E.
Bezemer, Sandra
Clemmensen, Stine B.
Biswas, Sumi
Li, Yuanyuan
El-Turabi, Aadil
Douglas, Alexander D.
Hermans, Pim
Detmers, Frank J.
de Jongh, Willem A.
Higgins, Matthew K.
Ashfield, Rebecca
Draper, Simon J.
Accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid C-terminal ‘C-tag’
title Accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid C-terminal ‘C-tag’
title_full Accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid C-terminal ‘C-tag’
title_fullStr Accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid C-terminal ‘C-tag’
title_full_unstemmed Accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid C-terminal ‘C-tag’
title_short Accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid C-terminal ‘C-tag’
title_sort accelerating the clinical development of protein-based vaccines for malaria by efficient purification using a four amino acid c-terminal ‘c-tag’
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5482323/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28153778
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2016.12.001
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