Description

Book Synopsis
Preparative Chromatography for Separation of Proteins addresses a wide range of the most current modeling techniques, strategies, and case studies of industrial separation of proteins and peptides to aid in the efficiency and efficacy of this broadly-used technique in the purification of biopharmaceuticals.

Table of Contents

List of Contributors xv

Series Preface xix

Preface xxi

1 Model-Based Preparative Chromatography Process Development in the QbD Paradigm 1
Arne Staby, Satinder Ahuja, and Anurag S. Rathore

1.1 Motivation 1

1.2 Regulatory Context of Preparative Chromatography and Process Understanding 1

1.3 Application of Mathematical Modeling to Preparative Chromatography 6

Acknowledgements 8

References 8

2 Adsorption Isotherms: Fundamentals and Modeling Aspects 11
Jørgen M. Mollerup

2.1 Introduction 11

2.2 Definitions 12

2.3 The Solute Velocity Model 14

2.4 Introduction to the Theory of Equilibrium 17

2.5 Association Equilibria 21

2.6 The Classical Adsorption Isotherm 24

2.7 The Classical Ion Exchange Adsorption Isotherm 26

2.8 Hydrophobic Adsorbents, HIC and RPC 38

2.9 Protein–Protein Association and Adsorption Isotherms 47

2.10 The Adsorption Isotherm of a GLP-1 Analogue 51

2.11 Concluding Remarks 59

Appendix 2.A Classical Thermodynamics 60

References 77

3 Simulation of Process Chromatography 81
Bernt Nilsson and Niklas Andersson

3.1 Introduction 81

3.2 Simulation-Based Prediction of Chromatographic Processes 82

3.3 Numerical Methods for Chromatography Simulation 94

3.4 Simulation-Based Model Calibration and Parameter Estimation 96

3.5 Simulation-Based Parametric Analysis of Chromatography 97

3.6 Simulation-Based Optimization of Process Chromatography 101

3.7 Summary 106

Acknowledgement 107

References 108

4 Simplified Methods Based on Mechanistic Models for Understanding and Designing Chromatography Processes for Proteins and Other Biological Products 111
Noriko Yoshimoto and Shuichi Yamamoto

4.1 Introduction 111

4.2 HETP and Related Variables in Isocratic Elution 114

4.3 Linear Gradient Elution (LGE) 120

4.4 Applications of the Model 130

4.5 Summary 145

Appendix 4.A Mechanistic Models for Chromatography 149

Appendix 4.B Distribution Coefficient and Binding Sites [20- 149

References 152

5 Development of Continuous Capture Steps in Bioprocess Applications 159
Frank Riske and Tom Ransohoff

5.1 Introduction 159

5.2 Economic Rationale for Continuous Processing 160

5.3 Developing a Continuous Capture Step 162

5.4 The Operation of MCC Systems 165

5.5 Modeling MCC Operation 167

5.6 Processing Bioreactor Feeds on a Capture MCC 169

5.7 The Future of MCC 171

References 172

6 Computational Modeling in Bioprocess Development 177
Francis Insaidoo, Suvrajit Banerjee, David Roush, and Steven Cramer

6.1 Linkage of Chromatographic Thermodynamics (Affinity, Kinetics, and Capacity) 177

6.2 Binding Maps and Coarse-Grained Modeling 180

6.3 QSPR for Either Classification or Quantification Prediction 188

6.4 All Atoms MD Simulations for Free Solution Studies and Surfaces 192

6.5 Ensemble Average and Comparison of Binding of Different Proteins in Chromatographic Systems 204

6.6 Antibody Homology Modeling and Bioprocess Development 205

6.7 Summary of Gaps and Future State 209

Acknowledgment 212

References 212

7 Chromatographic Scale-Up on a Volume Basis 227
Ernst B. Hansen

7.1 Introduction 227

7.2 Theoretical Background 229

7.3 Proof of Concept Examples 232

7.4 Design Applications: How to Scale up from Development Data 233

7.5 Discussion 240

7.6 Recommendations 242

References 245

8 Scaling Up Industrial Protein Chromatography: Where Modeling Can Help 247
Chris Antoniou, Justin McCue, Venkatesh Natarajan, Jörg Thömmes, and Qing Sarah Yuan

8.1 Introduction 247

8.2 Packing Quality: Why and How to Ensure Column Packing Quality Across Scales 248

8.3 Process Equipment: Using CFD to Describe Effects of Equipment Design on Column Performance 257

8.4 Long-Term Column Operation at Scale: Impact of Resin Lot-to-Lot Variability 264

8.5 Closing Remarks 265

References 265

9 High-Throughput Process Development 269
Silvia M. Pirrung and Marcel Ottens

9.1 Introduction to High-Throughput Process Development in Chromatography 269

9.2 Process Development Approaches 271

9.3 Case Descriptions 279

9.4 Future Directions 286

References 286

10 High-Throughput Column Chromatography Performed on Liquid Handling Stations 293
Patrick Diederich and Jürgen Hubbuch

10.1 Introduction 293

10.2 Chromatographic Methods 299

10.3 Results and Discussion 300

10.4 Summary and Conclusion 328

Acknowledgements 329

References 330

11 Lab-Scale Development of Chromatography Processes 333
Hong Li, Jennifer Pollard, and Nihal Tugcu

11.1 Introduction 333

11.2 Methodology and Proposed Workflow 336

11.3 Conclusions 377

Acknowledgments 377

References 377

12 Problem Solving by Using Modeling 381
Martin P. Breil, Søren S. Frederiksen, Steffen Kidal, and Thomas B. Hansen

12.1 Introduction 381

12.2 Theory 382

12.3 Materials and Methods 385

12.4 Determination of Model Parameters 385

12.5 Optimization In Silico 388

12.6 Extra-Column Effects 390

Abbreviations 397

References 398

13 Modeling Preparative Cation Exchange Chromatography of Monoclonal Antibodies 399
Stephen Hunt, Trent Larsen, and Robert J. Todd

13.1 Introduction 399

13.2 Theory 401

13.3 Model Development 403

13.4 Model Application 413

13.5 Conclusions 424

Nomenclature 425

Greek letters 425

References 426

14 Model-Based Process Development in the Biopharmaceutical Industry 429
Lars Sejergaard, Haleh Ahmadian, Thomas B. Hansen, Arne Staby, and Ernst B. Hansen

14.1 Introduction 429

14.2 Molecule—FVIII 430

14.3 Overall Process Design 431

14.4 Use of Mathematical Models to Ensure Process Robustness 432

14.5 Experimental Design of Verification Experiments 435

14.6 Discussion 438

14.7 Conclusion 439

Acknowledgements 439

Appendix 14.A Practical MATLAB Guideline to SEC 439

Appendix 14.B Derivation of Models Used for Column Simulations 449

References 455

15 Dynamic Simulations as a Predictive Model for a Multicolumn Chromatography Separation 457
Marc Bisschops and Mark Brower

15.1 Introduction 457

15.2 BioSMB Technology 459

15.3 Protein A Model Description 460

15.4 Fitting the Model Parameters 463

15.5 Case Studies 464

15.6 Results for Continuous Chromatography 469

15.7 Conclusions 475

References 476

16 Chemometrics Applications in Process Chromatography 479
Anurag S. Rathore and Sumit K. Singh

16.1 Introduction 479

16.2 Data Types 480

16.3 Data Preprocessing 481

16.4 Modeling Approaches 485

16.5 Case Studies of Use of Chemometrics in Process Chromatography 490

16.6 Guidance on Performing MVDA 495

References 497

17 Mid-UV Protein Absorption Spectra and Partial Least Squares Regression as Screening and PAT Tool 501
Sigrid Hansen, Nina Brestrich, Arne Staby, and Jürgen Hubbuch

17.1 Introduction 501

17.2 Mid-UV Protein Absorption Spectra and Partial Least Squares Regression 503

17.3 Spectral Similarity and Prediction Precision 511

17.4 Application as a Screening Tool: Analytics for High-Throughput Experiments 516

17.5 Application as a PAT Tool: Selective In-line Quantification and Real-Time Pooling 518

17.6 Case Studies 523

17.7 Conclusion and Outlook 532

References 532

18 Recent Progress Toward More Sustainable Biomanufacturing: Practical Considerations for Use in the Downstream Processing of Protein Products 537
Milton T. W. Hearn

18.1 Introduction 537

18.2 The Impact of Individualized Unit Operations versus Integrated Platform Technologies on Sustainable Manufacturing 543

18.3 Implications of Recycling and Reuse in Downstream Processing of Protein Products Generated by Biotechnological Processes: General Considerations 549

18.4 Metrics and Valorization Methods to Assess Process Sustainability 553

18.5 Conclusions and Perspectives 573

Acknowledgment 573

References 574

Index 583

Preparative Chromatography for Separation of

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A Hardback by Arne Staby, Anurag S. Rathore, Satinder Ahuja

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    View other formats and editions of Preparative Chromatography for Separation of by Arne Staby

    Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
    Publication Date: 11/04/2017
    ISBN13: 9781119031109, 978-1119031109
    ISBN10: 1119031109

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Preparative Chromatography for Separation of Proteins addresses a wide range of the most current modeling techniques, strategies, and case studies of industrial separation of proteins and peptides to aid in the efficiency and efficacy of this broadly-used technique in the purification of biopharmaceuticals.

    Table of Contents

    List of Contributors xv

    Series Preface xix

    Preface xxi

    1 Model-Based Preparative Chromatography Process Development in the QbD Paradigm 1
    Arne Staby, Satinder Ahuja, and Anurag S. Rathore

    1.1 Motivation 1

    1.2 Regulatory Context of Preparative Chromatography and Process Understanding 1

    1.3 Application of Mathematical Modeling to Preparative Chromatography 6

    Acknowledgements 8

    References 8

    2 Adsorption Isotherms: Fundamentals and Modeling Aspects 11
    Jørgen M. Mollerup

    2.1 Introduction 11

    2.2 Definitions 12

    2.3 The Solute Velocity Model 14

    2.4 Introduction to the Theory of Equilibrium 17

    2.5 Association Equilibria 21

    2.6 The Classical Adsorption Isotherm 24

    2.7 The Classical Ion Exchange Adsorption Isotherm 26

    2.8 Hydrophobic Adsorbents, HIC and RPC 38

    2.9 Protein–Protein Association and Adsorption Isotherms 47

    2.10 The Adsorption Isotherm of a GLP-1 Analogue 51

    2.11 Concluding Remarks 59

    Appendix 2.A Classical Thermodynamics 60

    References 77

    3 Simulation of Process Chromatography 81
    Bernt Nilsson and Niklas Andersson

    3.1 Introduction 81

    3.2 Simulation-Based Prediction of Chromatographic Processes 82

    3.3 Numerical Methods for Chromatography Simulation 94

    3.4 Simulation-Based Model Calibration and Parameter Estimation 96

    3.5 Simulation-Based Parametric Analysis of Chromatography 97

    3.6 Simulation-Based Optimization of Process Chromatography 101

    3.7 Summary 106

    Acknowledgement 107

    References 108

    4 Simplified Methods Based on Mechanistic Models for Understanding and Designing Chromatography Processes for Proteins and Other Biological Products 111
    Noriko Yoshimoto and Shuichi Yamamoto

    4.1 Introduction 111

    4.2 HETP and Related Variables in Isocratic Elution 114

    4.3 Linear Gradient Elution (LGE) 120

    4.4 Applications of the Model 130

    4.5 Summary 145

    Appendix 4.A Mechanistic Models for Chromatography 149

    Appendix 4.B Distribution Coefficient and Binding Sites [20- 149

    References 152

    5 Development of Continuous Capture Steps in Bioprocess Applications 159
    Frank Riske and Tom Ransohoff

    5.1 Introduction 159

    5.2 Economic Rationale for Continuous Processing 160

    5.3 Developing a Continuous Capture Step 162

    5.4 The Operation of MCC Systems 165

    5.5 Modeling MCC Operation 167

    5.6 Processing Bioreactor Feeds on a Capture MCC 169

    5.7 The Future of MCC 171

    References 172

    6 Computational Modeling in Bioprocess Development 177
    Francis Insaidoo, Suvrajit Banerjee, David Roush, and Steven Cramer

    6.1 Linkage of Chromatographic Thermodynamics (Affinity, Kinetics, and Capacity) 177

    6.2 Binding Maps and Coarse-Grained Modeling 180

    6.3 QSPR for Either Classification or Quantification Prediction 188

    6.4 All Atoms MD Simulations for Free Solution Studies and Surfaces 192

    6.5 Ensemble Average and Comparison of Binding of Different Proteins in Chromatographic Systems 204

    6.6 Antibody Homology Modeling and Bioprocess Development 205

    6.7 Summary of Gaps and Future State 209

    Acknowledgment 212

    References 212

    7 Chromatographic Scale-Up on a Volume Basis 227
    Ernst B. Hansen

    7.1 Introduction 227

    7.2 Theoretical Background 229

    7.3 Proof of Concept Examples 232

    7.4 Design Applications: How to Scale up from Development Data 233

    7.5 Discussion 240

    7.6 Recommendations 242

    References 245

    8 Scaling Up Industrial Protein Chromatography: Where Modeling Can Help 247
    Chris Antoniou, Justin McCue, Venkatesh Natarajan, Jörg Thömmes, and Qing Sarah Yuan

    8.1 Introduction 247

    8.2 Packing Quality: Why and How to Ensure Column Packing Quality Across Scales 248

    8.3 Process Equipment: Using CFD to Describe Effects of Equipment Design on Column Performance 257

    8.4 Long-Term Column Operation at Scale: Impact of Resin Lot-to-Lot Variability 264

    8.5 Closing Remarks 265

    References 265

    9 High-Throughput Process Development 269
    Silvia M. Pirrung and Marcel Ottens

    9.1 Introduction to High-Throughput Process Development in Chromatography 269

    9.2 Process Development Approaches 271

    9.3 Case Descriptions 279

    9.4 Future Directions 286

    References 286

    10 High-Throughput Column Chromatography Performed on Liquid Handling Stations 293
    Patrick Diederich and Jürgen Hubbuch

    10.1 Introduction 293

    10.2 Chromatographic Methods 299

    10.3 Results and Discussion 300

    10.4 Summary and Conclusion 328

    Acknowledgements 329

    References 330

    11 Lab-Scale Development of Chromatography Processes 333
    Hong Li, Jennifer Pollard, and Nihal Tugcu

    11.1 Introduction 333

    11.2 Methodology and Proposed Workflow 336

    11.3 Conclusions 377

    Acknowledgments 377

    References 377

    12 Problem Solving by Using Modeling 381
    Martin P. Breil, Søren S. Frederiksen, Steffen Kidal, and Thomas B. Hansen

    12.1 Introduction 381

    12.2 Theory 382

    12.3 Materials and Methods 385

    12.4 Determination of Model Parameters 385

    12.5 Optimization In Silico 388

    12.6 Extra-Column Effects 390

    Abbreviations 397

    References 398

    13 Modeling Preparative Cation Exchange Chromatography of Monoclonal Antibodies 399
    Stephen Hunt, Trent Larsen, and Robert J. Todd

    13.1 Introduction 399

    13.2 Theory 401

    13.3 Model Development 403

    13.4 Model Application 413

    13.5 Conclusions 424

    Nomenclature 425

    Greek letters 425

    References 426

    14 Model-Based Process Development in the Biopharmaceutical Industry 429
    Lars Sejergaard, Haleh Ahmadian, Thomas B. Hansen, Arne Staby, and Ernst B. Hansen

    14.1 Introduction 429

    14.2 Molecule—FVIII 430

    14.3 Overall Process Design 431

    14.4 Use of Mathematical Models to Ensure Process Robustness 432

    14.5 Experimental Design of Verification Experiments 435

    14.6 Discussion 438

    14.7 Conclusion 439

    Acknowledgements 439

    Appendix 14.A Practical MATLAB Guideline to SEC 439

    Appendix 14.B Derivation of Models Used for Column Simulations 449

    References 455

    15 Dynamic Simulations as a Predictive Model for a Multicolumn Chromatography Separation 457
    Marc Bisschops and Mark Brower

    15.1 Introduction 457

    15.2 BioSMB Technology 459

    15.3 Protein A Model Description 460

    15.4 Fitting the Model Parameters 463

    15.5 Case Studies 464

    15.6 Results for Continuous Chromatography 469

    15.7 Conclusions 475

    References 476

    16 Chemometrics Applications in Process Chromatography 479
    Anurag S. Rathore and Sumit K. Singh

    16.1 Introduction 479

    16.2 Data Types 480

    16.3 Data Preprocessing 481

    16.4 Modeling Approaches 485

    16.5 Case Studies of Use of Chemometrics in Process Chromatography 490

    16.6 Guidance on Performing MVDA 495

    References 497

    17 Mid-UV Protein Absorption Spectra and Partial Least Squares Regression as Screening and PAT Tool 501
    Sigrid Hansen, Nina Brestrich, Arne Staby, and Jürgen Hubbuch

    17.1 Introduction 501

    17.2 Mid-UV Protein Absorption Spectra and Partial Least Squares Regression 503

    17.3 Spectral Similarity and Prediction Precision 511

    17.4 Application as a Screening Tool: Analytics for High-Throughput Experiments 516

    17.5 Application as a PAT Tool: Selective In-line Quantification and Real-Time Pooling 518

    17.6 Case Studies 523

    17.7 Conclusion and Outlook 532

    References 532

    18 Recent Progress Toward More Sustainable Biomanufacturing: Practical Considerations for Use in the Downstream Processing of Protein Products 537
    Milton T. W. Hearn

    18.1 Introduction 537

    18.2 The Impact of Individualized Unit Operations versus Integrated Platform Technologies on Sustainable Manufacturing 543

    18.3 Implications of Recycling and Reuse in Downstream Processing of Protein Products Generated by Biotechnological Processes: General Considerations 549

    18.4 Metrics and Valorization Methods to Assess Process Sustainability 553

    18.5 Conclusions and Perspectives 573

    Acknowledgment 573

    References 574

    Index 583

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