Probing the affinity of a ligand for homologous protein targets currently relies on laborious assays that need special equipment and high amounts of isolated, highly pure proteins. Herein we present the use of pISep, an integrated buffer system and modeling package, as an analytical method to rapidly and accurately probe the binding strength and mechanisms of homologous proteins to surface-bound ligands. To demonstrate our method, we utilized the four subclasses of human immunoglobulin G (IgG) as model homologous protein targets and the IgG-binding peptide HWRGWV as model ligand. Following IgG adsorption on a HWRGWV-Toyopearl adsorbent, the pISep buffer system was used to run uncoupled dual elution gradients of... More
Probing the affinity of a ligand for homologous protein targets currently relies on laborious assays that need special equipment and high amounts of isolated, highly pure proteins. Herein we present the use of pISep, an integrated buffer system and modeling package, as an analytical method to rapidly and accurately probe the binding strength and mechanisms of homologous proteins to surface-bound ligands. To demonstrate our method, we utilized the four subclasses of human immunoglobulin G (IgG) as model homologous protein targets and the IgG-binding peptide HWRGWV as model ligand. Following IgG adsorption on a HWRGWV-Toyopearl adsorbent, the pISep buffer system was used to run uncoupled dual elution gradients of pH (from pH 8.5 to 2.5) and either isocratic or time dependent salt concentration. Both the sequence and partial overlap of elution times (IgG4 > IgG3 ≥ IgG1 > IgG2) was found to match closely the values of binding strength (KD) determined with both in silico docking simulations and isothermal titration calorimetry experiments. pISep gradients performed at different values of ionic strengths provided a means to compare the contribution of hydrophobic vs. electrostatic interactions to the IgG-peptide affinity. The shifts in retention times indicated that, among the various components of the binding energy, the hydrophobic interaction dominates in the binding of IgG2 and IgG4, whereas the binding of IgG1 and IgG3 features a balance of electrostatic and hydrophobic modes. These findings were also confirmed by the in silico analysis of the complexes formed by HWRGWV and the Fc fragment of the IgG subclasses. Collectively, these results indicate that the retention times on pISep elution gradients - in particular peak max, overlap, and shift under different conditions - directly correlate to the strength and nature of protein-ligand interactions. This work demonstrates the effectiveness of the pISep toolbox for probing the differential binding of homologous proteins to a reference ligand and informing the optimization of platform processes for the purification and fractionation of biotherapeutics.,Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.