Protein drugs are important in the treatment of diabetes, leukemia, hemophilia, Alzheimer's and Gaucher disease, and osteoporosis. They are also important therapeutic agents in organ replacement, tissue regeneration and wound repair, regardless of whether resulting from disease, aging or battle related injury. The technologies for large scale protein separation needed to produce these drugs have lagged behind molecular biology, and now are responsible for most of their cost. The use of generally recognized as safe (GRAS) polymers (polyelectrolytes) are investigated to isolate and concentrate the target proteins from the cell crush or lysate in which they are formed. The process by which this happens is a spontaneous separation into two liquids: the more dense phase contains the polymer and the target protein in high concentration. The goal of this work is to understand the principles by which this complex coacervation can be optimized by (a) the selection of the polymer, (b) the choice of the conditions for effecting the coacervation, and (c) the method of removing polymer from the target protein.

The interdisciplinary coupling of bioengineering, bioanlytical, and polymer physical chemistry proposed provide an example of the unification of perspectives appropriate to progress in this field. The PIs take a pro-active role in involving members of underrepresented groups in research. Both gender and racial minorities make up a significant proportion of their groups. There are currently nine women in the two groups (1 postdoc, 4 graduates, 3 undergraduates, 1 high school senior), three of whom are involved in work related to this proposal (protein polyelectrolyte coacervation). There is active participation in an NSF REU and IGERT grants for promoting undergraduate research. Students working on this project will obtain training in areas of great importance to biotechnology and pharmaceutical innovation and applications.

Project Report

The purpose of this project was to develop an improved method for purification of protein drugs, which continue to have a growing share of the drug market. This is especially true in the burgeoning field of monoclonal antibodies, where production costs are mainly due to purification steps as the proteins themselves are inexpensively harvested from bacterial or mammalian cells. Current purification involves a a number of liquid chromatography steps that are expensive, time consuming, and diluting. Our method involves combination of the crude filtrate with a biocompatible (injectable) biopolymer which at the right pH spontaneously forms a mAb-rich dense fluid (coacervate), essentially free of host cell contaminants. We demonstrated that this biopolymer can effectively separate by coacervation even very similar proteins, such as two forms of the milk protein β-lactoglobulin which differ in less than 1% of their amino acid content. More fundamentally, we studied the molecular process by which these coacervates form, and their phyiscochemical properties. Beyond protein purification, these fluid-ike materials can be used to stabilize and deliver a variety of proteins, to immobilize and protect expensive enzymes used in industrial applications such as cleaning, and as delivery agents in personal care products. Many other applications can be imagined for these fluids, in which proteins at concentrations up to 20%w/w are stable with respect to aggregation, denaturation and bacterial degradation.

Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2010-06-01
Budget End
2014-05-31
Support Year
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$299,998
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Amherst
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
01003