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* Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269; and
Global Biologics, Pfizer Global Research and Development, Chesterfield, Missouri 63017
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Devendra S. Kalonia, Dept. of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, University of Connecticut Unit-3092, 69 North Eagleville Road, Storrs, CT 06269. Tel.: 860-486-3655; Fax: 860-486-4998; E-mail: kalonia{at}uconn.edu.
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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23% protein by weight, and red blood cells have
35% protein by weight (9
Over the recent past, we have been involved with the analysis of solution rheology of high concentration protein solutions using an indigenously developed shear rheometer capable of working at ultrasonic frequencies (15
17
). The broad objective of our work has been targeted toward the generation of a novel tool/parameter for characterizing PPI in high protein concentration solutions. Our studies have indicated that ultrasonic storage modulus (G'), a measure of fraction of applied energy stored by a system, can provide valuable information regarding the nature of PPI in high concentration protein solutions. The reasons for believing that such a correlation between solution G' and PPI could exist can be better appreciated if we briefly review the molecular origins of flow properties of a liquid.
The viscosity, or resistance to flow, of a fluid is a result of momentum transfer between the flowing layers which itself is a result of molecular interactions, i.e., the viscosity of a system, is determined by how molecules, which constitute the system, interact. Any movement of molecules (e.g., rotational, translational etc.) or interaction between them is associated with a temperature-dependent relaxation process characterized by a relaxation time (
). For pure liquids,
ranges from 1014 to 1011 s (18
). Liquid water has a
of
1012 at 25°C (19
). In solutions, additional relaxation processes involving solute-solute and solute-solvent interactions exist that are associated with their characteristic
. Rotational and translation diffusion of protein molecules in solutions, segmental motions, and conformational rearrangements occur on the timescale of 107109 s (20
26
). Relaxation of bound water occurs around 10101011 s (27
). The timescale of these relaxations is governed not only by temperature but also by the solvent and solute concentration. PPI affect conformational rearrangements and segmental motions in protein solutions and thus alter their characteristic
, e.g., strongly interacting systems (high viscosity solutions of partially unfolded protein and protein gels) exhibit increased values of
over weakly interacting systems.
Dynamic rheology experiments involving applications of oscillatory strain to the sample can be employed to determine
. The frequency of the applied strain is utilized to gain insight into the relaxation process in these studies. For studying processes at timescales of 107109 s, measurements at MHz frequencies need to be conducted, since 1/
should be of the order of
of the process. Ultrasonic rheometry is a powerful technique for nondestructive analysis (28
) of processes relaxing at nanosecond scales (29
,30
). The pioneering work in this field was done by Mason and co-workers (31
), who studied viscosity and high-frequency elasticity of several polyisobutylene fluids at ultrasonic frequencies by employing quartz crystal vibrating in the torsional and shear modes. Since then, the technique has evolved as a nonconventional means of assessing rheological characteristics of various fluids. In principle, ultrasonic rheometers (32
,33
) measure the storage (G') and loss (G'') modulus of liquids that characterize elastic storage and viscous loss of energy in a solution, respectively. The moduli are related to the fundamental
of the liquid through the following relationships (34
):
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
<< 1/
, i.e., when lower frequency strain is applied, molecules have enough time to reorient and relax within a single strain cycle, resulting in complete dissipation or loss of the applied energy. Consequently, G'' has a finite value but G' is nonexistent. As 1/
decreases, i.e.,
increases and approaches
, 
1, molecules cannot relax completely and the system begins to store a part of the applied energy resulting in a finite value of G'.
Macromolecules in solution are dynamic molecules with numerous randomly contorted conformations that are continuously changing. In dilute solutions, the average conformation of such a molecule is determined by the relative energy minima of various isomeric conformations. The rapidity with which the conformations change is determined by solute-solvent interactions. In concentrated or crowded solutions, interparticle interactions significantly affect the selection of the thermodynamically stable state as well as the rate of change in molecular conformations (35
). Thus, a relaxation process in macromolecular solutions usually exhibits a spectrum of relaxation times instead of a single discreet relaxation time (35
,36
). The moduli for macromolecular solutions are thus represented as
![]() | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
In protein solutions, PPI affecting
can be studied through the measurement of dynamic moduli at frequencies consistent with the
of the relaxation processes. Single-frequency measurements can be used to determine change in moduli with solution condition, and thus assess the effect of solution condition on the relaxation process, as long as the frequency is close to the average
of the relaxation spectrum (1/
is an order of magnitude around
) and not orders of magnitude away from it (35
). If the frequency is too low, G' is nonexistent or negligibly small and G'' is insensitive to solution conditions. If the frequency is too high, the moduli approach limiting values, thereby compromising sensitivity to the changing solution environment. In principle, either of the two moduli can give information regarding the changing
of the system. However, in the frequency domain around
, such that 0.1

10, G'' first increases and then decreases with increasing
(as 
1 and then exceeds 1) (Eq. 2) but G' constantly increases with
(Eq. 1). Thus, whereas an increase in
of a system will always result in an increasing G', it may result in an increasing or decreasing value of G''. Consequently, G' is a more reliable parameter for predicting and understanding change in PPI in protein solutions from single frequency rheology measurements. From this brief introduction, it can be gathered that for protein solutions, G' measurements at MHz frequencies, consistent with a timescale of 107109 s, should provide information regarding PPI in these solutions.
Techniques for characterizing PPI in relatively dilute solutions include among others analytical ultracentrifugation, static light scattering (SLS), and dynamic light scattering (DLS). SLS has been routinely used for measurement of a thermodynamic nonideality parameter, i.e., second virial coefficient (B22) which characterizes solute-solute interactions and indirectly solute-solvent interactions (37
,38
). B22, a dilute solution property, has been found to correlate remarkably well with protein solubility (39
,40
), crystallization (37
,41
) and protein precipitation (42
) from supersaturated solutions. It is an established parameter for characterizing PPI in protein solutions. Zimm (43
) in 1946 studied the osmotic second virial coefficient of protein to quantitate the deviation from ideality of a dilute solution. The osmotic pressure (
) of dilute solution follows Eq. 5, which reduces to a van't Hoff relation for an ideal solution when B22 vanishes:
![]() | (5) |
In the above equation, R is the universal gas constant, T is the absolute temperature, c is the solute concentration, and Mw is the average molecular weight. Whereas the value of B22 reflects the magnitude of deviation from ideality, its sign reflects the nature of this deviation. A positive value corresponds to net repulsive interactions between the solute molecules wherein the osmotic pressure increases above that for an ideal solution whereas a negative value corresponds to net attractive interactions between the solute molecules with a consequent decrease in solution osmotic pressure below that for an ideal solution (44
). In terms of a solute's activity in solution, B22 can be related to the molar activity coefficient (
2) by the following relationship (45
):
![]() | (6) |
DLS measures the diffusion coefficient of a solute molecule in solution. The diffusion coefficient depends on the hydrodynamic diameter (dH) of a solute molecule and interparticle repulsive and attractive forces (46
,47
). For solutions in which interparticle interactions are too weak to influence the diffusion of the solute particle, the diffusion coefficient is independent of solute concentration and the measured dH is an absolute dH. However, for strongly interacting solute systems, the so-called mutual-diffusion coefficient (Dm) is concentration-dependent and approaches a self or tracer diffusion coefficient (Ds) under infinitely dilute solution conditions with c
0, i.e., in a strongly interacting system, the measured dH is an apparent diameter that approaches the true particle diameter as c
0 (48
,49
). Therefore, Ds measures the true dH and Dm measures an apparent dH of the solute particle. The dependence of Dm on solute concentration can be represented by the following relationship (50
):
![]() | (7) |
slope) is a measure of interparticle interaction and is represented by (50
![]() | (8) |
1 is the coefficient of the linear term in the virial expansion of the frictional coefficient as a function of solute concentration, and
sp is the partial specific volume of the solute. The contribution of B22 to kD arises from the role of chemical potential in driving the diffusion process, whereas the last two terms represent the hydrodynamic drag (52
![]() | (9) |
In Eq. 9, k is the Boltzmann constant, T is the absolute temperature, and
is the solution viscosity. A negative value of kD results in a decrease in Dm below Ds, which translates to an increase in the apparent dH through the Stokes-Einstein equation, indicating an inhibition of diffusion of the solute and thus attractive interparticle interactions.
The work presented here was undertaken to investigate if the understanding generated from ultrasonic G' measurements regarding PPI in moderate to high concentration solutions of a model protein, a monoclonal antibody (IgG2) could be corroborated with classical techniques for analyzing PPI, i.e., SLS and DLS in relatively dilute solutions. The reasons for using two different concentration regimes were twofold. First, we wanted to compare our ultrasonic G' results with classical and universally accepted parameters for characterizing PPI, which are B22 and kD. This was necessary to establish the utility of ultrasonic G' for analyzing PPI. However, both these parameters characterize nonideality in dilute rather than concentrated solutions. Second, currently available biophysical techniques for characterization of macromolecular interactions do not permit analysis of concentrated protein solutions due to contribution of higher order coefficients in the virial expansion of solute properties, i.e., osmotic pressure, diffusion coefficient, and frictional coefficient. Quantitation of higher order coefficients is not trivial.
It is well-appreciated in the literature that an accurate quantitation of a concentrated solution property cannot be made based on dilute solution measurements because of the contribution of higher coefficients. However, in most cases the qualitative effect of changing solution conditions on protein behavior can be expected to be similar for dilute and concentrated solutions, with the PPI becoming stronger in concentrated solutions. This is because the fundamental properties of a molecule-like net charge, volume, hydrophobicity, etc., that eventually govern the PPI, do not usually change with concentration. This however, does not undermine the significance of measurements in high concentration solutions since differences in PPI, as a function of changing solution condition, might not be measurable or be insignificant in dilute protein solutions, whereas they might become significant and large in concentrated solutions. Besides, if the conformation and/or geometry of a molecule were to change with concentration, it would further necessitate analysis of PPI under intended concentrated solution conditions.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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-light chains and a molecular weight of 144,000. Measurements for isoelectric point determination revealed four bands between pH 8.75 and 9.25 on the isoelectric focusing gel. The supplied stock solution was stored at 4°C. All other chemicals including, sodium chloride, acetic acid, sodium acetate, monobasic, and dibasic sodium phosphate and tris(hydroxymethyl) aminomethane, hydrochloric acid, and sodium hydroxide were obtained from Fisher Scientific (Fair Lawn, NJ). Deionized water equivalent to Milli-QTM grade was used to prepare all solutions. Millipore's (Billerica, MA) Amicon Ultra centrifugation tubes with a molecular weight cutoff of 5,000 were obtained from Fisher Scientific.
Methods
For the purpose of this work, analysis was conducted at a temperature of 25° ± 0.1°C. Phosphoric acid-monobasic sodium phosphate (pH 3.0), acetic acid-sodium acetate (pH 4.0, 4.7, 5.4, and 5.9), monobasic-dibasic sodium phosphate (pH 6.4 and 7.4), and tris(hydroxymethyl) aminomethane-hydrochloride (pH 9.0) buffers were prepared to maintain the solution pH. The buffer strength was 10 mM for 40 mM and 300 mM ionic strength buffers and 1 mM for 4 mM ionic strength buffers. The ionic strength was adjusted with sodium chloride. The procedure for sample preparation is described in a recent publication (15
).
Ultrasonic shear rheometry
Measurements of G' for the model IgG2 solutions by ultrasonic rheometry were conducted in a previous work (15
). A brief description of the rheometer is included here. An ultrasonic shear rheometer capable of operating at MHz frequencies has been developed in our laboratory (16
). The instrument can perform fast analysis of solution rheology of small microliter sample volumes and allows for calculation of solution viscosity, G' and G''. The rheometer is based on a piezoelectric quartz crystal, which is sensitive to the mechanical properties of the liquid placed on top of it. The change in mechanical properties of a liquid including its viscosity and moduli can be determined by measuring the change in the crystal's conductance (G) and the series resonance frequency (fGmax), defined as the frequency where the conductance of the crystal is the highest, after loading the liquid on the crystal. These two parameters are used to calculate the change in the series resistance (R) and reactance (X) of the crystal brought about by the liquid, i.e., RLiq and XLiq. The following equations can then be used to determine the moduli of the liquid in which A is the electromechanical calibration constant determined separately using water-glycerol mixtures of known density and viscosity and
Liq is the density of the liquid:
![]() | (10) |
![]() | (11) |
The measurement setup is enclosed in a circulating water bath for temperature control of the sample droplet. For further details, the interested reader is referred to recent publications (15
17
) regarding the development of the instrument and its applications. Ultrasonic rheology studies, for measurement of G' and G'', were conducted at 25 ± 0.1°C on IgG2 solutions ranging in concentrations from 20 to 120 mg/ml using the developed rheometer.
Dynamic light scattering
DLS studies were conducted on Malvern Instruments' (Worcestershire, UK) Zetasizer Nano S at 25° ± 0.1°C. For DLS analysis, the buffers were filtered through sterile 0.1 µm Millipore's Millex-W syringe filters before dialysis. After dialysis, the concentration of IgG2 in the solution was adjusted to 12 mg/ml and pH was checked to ensure consistency with the desired pH. The protein solutions were then centrifuged on a Costar (Cambridge, MA) minicentrifuge at 5600 x g for 10 min before analysis. The Malvern Zetasizer Nano S utilizes a 632.8 nm Helium-Neon laser and analyzes scattered light at an angle of 173° by utilizing a novel Non-Invasive Back-Scatter technique. Back-scatter measurement reduces interference from multiple scattering as the light beam does not travel through the entire sample solution and thus allows for higher concentrations solutions to be analyzed. It also limits the interference from dust particles, which behave as large particles and do not scatter significantly in the back direction. Malvern Instruments' DTS2145 low volume glass cuvette was used for holding the sample. The sample volume used for analysis was 70 µl. A total of 10 scans, each with a duration of 5 s, were accumulated for each sample analyzed. Samples were analyzed at 4, 8, and 12 mg/ml for each solution condition. All the samples were analyzed in triplicate. The viscosity of each solution was measured on the ultrasonic shear rheometer and was used in the calculation of Dm. Malvern's DTS software analyzes the acquired correlogram (correlation function versus time) for calculation of hydrodynamic diameter (dH). The measured dH can then be used in the Stokes-Einstein equation for calculation of Dm.
Static light scattering
SLS studies were conducted on Precision Detector's (Bellingham, MA) PDDLS Cool Batch system connected to a PD2000DLS light scattering detector through a 5-µm optical cable. For SLS analysis, all the buffers were filtered through Millipore's 0.05-µm membrane filters before dialysis. After dialysis, protein solutions were filtered through Whatman's (Florham Park, NJ) 0.2-µm syringe filters, and IgG2 concentration was adjusted to 6 mg/ml. The protein solutions were then centrifuged on a Costar minicentrifuge at 5600 x g for 10 min before analysis. The PDDLS Cool Batch uses an 800 nm laser light source and detects scattered light at 90° from 0.03 µl volume of the sample solution. A standard quartz cuvette with a capacity of 850 µl was used as the sample holder. A minimum volume of 100 µl was required for analysis with the cuvette used. Scattered intensity was accumulated at intervals of 1 s for a period of 60 s. Scattered intensity >3% of the average scattered intensity was regarded as noise and not used during further averaging. This was done to reduce the contribution of dust particles to the average scattered intensity. Samples were analyzed at 6 mg/ml and then sequentially diluted to lower concentrations to get at least seven concentration points for each solution condition. All the samples were analyzed in triplicate. The acquired scattered intensities were used to calculate B22 by constructing the Debye plot according to the following equation:
![]() | (12) |
![]() | (13) |
In the above equations, R
is the excess Rayleigh ratio, i.e., a measure of light scattered by the solute; n is the solvent refractive index; dn/dc is the refractive index increment of the solute; NA is the Avogadro number; and
0 is the wavelength of the incident light. For conversion of scattered intensity to Rayleigh ratio, a conversion factor, A, was calculated as follows: A standard IgG molecule of known molecular weight was analyzed on a size exclusion chromatography column connected in series to a dual detector cell assembly, housing an ultraviolet and light scattering detector, and a refractive index detector (54
). The setup allows for calculation of dn/dc of a solute in a given solution condition as defined by the mobile phase. The mobile phase used for this purpose was pH 5.4, 40 mM, acetate buffer. Once the dn/dc was calculated (0.184), the optical constant K for the static light scattering instrument was calculated using Eq. 13. Equation 12 can then be written as
![]() | (14) |
| RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
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60 mg/ml, i.e., these solutions behave as Newtonian liquids at 10 MHz, either because the interactions between the molecules are too weak or the concentration of the interacting molecules is too less for the system to store energy in the allowed time. The same is true for pH 7.4 and 9.0 solutions at and below 40 mg/ml. At concentrations of 40 mg/ml or less, pH 3.0 solutions (and pH 4.0 solutions (15
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![]() | (15) |
In the expression, r is the interparticle center-center distance, Whs is the hard sphere (excluded volume) potential, Wcharge is the electrostatic charge-charge potential, Wdisp is the van der Waals dispersion potential, Wosm is the attractive potential due to the osmotic effect of added salt, Wass is the square-well interaction that accounts for self-association of proteins, and Wdip is the interaction due to permanent and induced dipoles. Under low to moderate ionic strength conditions (<0.1 M), Wosm is not significant, and other terms in Eq. 15 contribute to the total interparticle interactions. Among these interactions, charge-charge forces, which are repulsive in nature, play the predominant role in dilute solutions unless the molecules have a tendency to self-associate, when the last term also contributes significantly (42
,58
) . In concentrated solutions, repulsive-excluded volume effect and attractive van der Waals and dipole forces, all of which are short-range, begin to contribute significantly in addition to charge-charge repulsive forces.
Previous investigation (15
) into the contributing interactions responsible for the aforementioned behavior of the model IgG2 has revealed the contribution of higher effective volume (intrinsic viscosity) and electrostatics (
-potential) at lower pH studied in this work. Both intrinsic viscosity and
-potential gradually decreased as the pH was increased from 4.0 to 9.0, indicating a decrease in repulsive PPI. In the cited work, pH 9.0 solutions exhibited the greatest scattered light intensity measured at 600 nm and at an IgG2 concentration of 10 mg/ml, whereas pH 4.0 solutions exhibited the least scattered intensity. Concentrated solutions (120 mg/ml) at pH 9.0 also exhibited slight opalescence, which could not be removed by centrifugation. However, solutions became clear on reducing the solution pH, indicating the presence of some soluble and reversible higher molecular weight species in pH 9.0 solutions at 120 mg/ml. The reversibility of the opalescence also indicated that it was not a result of precipitation or irreversible aggregate formation. Our results thus indicated the gradual transition from highly repulsive PPI to less repulsive or more attractive PPI with increasing pH. To investigate if such an understanding regarding PPI generated from ultrasonic rheology and biophysical characterization studies of IgG2 solutions was indeed correct, light scattering studies were undertaken.
Fig. 2 a shows the effect of solution pH and protein concentration on the measured dH (apparent) of the model IgG2 solutions at an ionic strength of 4 mM. Hydrodynamic diameter changes both with solution pH and protein concentration. A decrease in dH with IgG2 concentration is observed for pH 4.0 solutions and an increase is observed for pH 9.0 solutions. Using Stokes-Einstein equation, the measured dH and solution viscosity values were used to calculate Dm for the model IgG2 molecule. These calculated values have been plotted in Fig. 2 b in which the lines represent a linear fit (Eq. 7) to the data. With an increasing solution pH, a decrease in the slope of the plots is observed. In our studies, the average value of the intercept of Fig. 2 b, which corresponds to Ds for the model IgG2, was calculated to be 4.20 ± 0.16 x 107 cm2/s, which corresponds to a dH of 11.3 ± 0.8 nm. This size is equal (within experimental error) to the dH reported in the literature for a protein with Mw of
144,000 (59
,60
). From Fig. 2 b, it can be seen that with increasing solution pH, PPI become more attractive and less repulsive, consistent with the behavior understood from solution G' measurements. During DLS studies, the polydispersity index for all the samples analyzed was
0.1, which is consistent with a monodisperse sample, i.e., no aggregates were present in the solutions analyzed.
|
![]() | (16) |
![]() | (17) |
![]() | (18) |
|
D) is larger than the average collision time (
c) between the solute molecules, and ii), the scattering wave number q as represented by Eq. 19 is small enough such that q1 is larger than the center-to-center interparticle distance (64
![]() | (19) |
In Eq. 19, n represents the solution refractive index,
is the scattering angle, and
is the wavelength of incident light. In our experiments,
c for IgG2 molecules at the lowest concentration used for DLS measurements, i.e., 4 mg/ml, was measured to be
9 x 106 s, using Eq. 20 (65
), and decreased to
3 x 106 s at 12 mg/ml:
![]() | (20) |
In Eq. 20,
n is the protein number density defined as number of protein molecules per unit volume and is dependent on protein concentration. The
D calculated from the decay of the correlation function was
4 x 105 s. The center-center distance at 4 mg/ml was calculated as
to be
31 nm, which reduced to
22 nm at 12 mg/ml, whereas q1 was
39 nm for our experiments. Therefore, although SLS measurements were affected by thermodynamic interactions, DLS measurements were affected by hydrodynamic interactions in addition to thermodynamic interactions (65
). The negative slope at pH 9.0 in Fig. 2 b is thus a result of a kD exceeding kT. Table 1 summarizes the results for DLS and SLS analysis conducted on the model IgG2. Although the slopes in Figs. 2 b and 3 for pH 9.0 solutions have different signs for the reason explained above, the overall behavior of the IgG2 in solutions as elucidated by SLS measurements is consistent with DLS measurements, i.e., the PPI are most repulsive at pH 4.0 and least repulsive at pH 9.0. Both kD and kT (
B22) exhibit a monotonic decrease with increasing solution pH.
|
To investigate the correlation between G' and PPI further, ultrasonic rheology and light scattering measurements were conducted on IgG2 solutions of increasing ionic strength at various solution pH. The ionic strength was adjusted with sodium chloride. Fig. 4, a and b, show the effect of ionic strength on IgG2 solution G' at different pH. Fig. 4 a shows data for 120 mg/ml and Fig. 4 b for 40 mg/ml IgG2 solutions. From Fig. 4 a, it can be observed that solution G' increases at pH 4.0 and 5.4, and decreases at pH 9.0 with increasing solution ionic strength. At pH 7.4, such a monotonic increase or decrease in solution G' with ionic strength is not observed as G' decreases from 4 mM to 40 mM and then increases from 40 mM to 300 mM, although G' at 300 mM is still lower than that at 4 mM. It has been discussed earlier in this section that when PPI are highly repulsive (below pH 5.4 from Fig. 1 a), G' is higher for solutions with lower concentration of IgG2. As the interactions become less repulsive and more attractive (with pH increasing above 5.4), solutions with higher IgG2 concentrations exhibit higher solution G'. From Fig. 4 b, it can be observed that at 40 mg/ml, ionic strength does not significantly affect the solution G', although the measured G' is highest at pH 4.0 as mentioned earlier during discussion of Fig. 1 a. Therefore, the increase in G' with ionic strength observed for pH 4.0 and 5.4 (Fig. 4 a) is a result of PPI becoming less repulsive or more attractive. The increase cannot be due to PPI becoming more repulsive since no significant change was observed for lower IgG2 concentration solutions (40 mg/ml). For pH 7.4 and 9.0 solutions in Fig. 4 a, the predominant effect of ionic strength is to decrease G' at higher protein concentrations, whereas lower protein concentration (Fig. 4 b) solutions do not exhibit a significant change in G' with ionic strength. This kind of behavior indicates that the interactions become less attractive or more repulsive with increasing ionic strength with pH 9.0 solutions being affected more than pH 7.4 solutions. However, the increase in repulsive interactions is not large enough to increase G' at lower protein concentrations. Thus, the overall effect of increasing ionic strength is to neutralize the effect of solution pH on PPI and solution rheology in the model IgG2 solutions (increasing G' at pH 4.0 and 5.4 and making PPI less repulsive or more attractive and decreasing G' at pH 7.4 and 9.0 and making PPI more repulsive or less attractive).
Fig. 5 summarizes the effect of ionic strength on kD for the model IgG2 in solutions of different solution pH. A scale break has been included in the x axis to compare the low and high ionic strength regions. A more extensive study of the effect of ionic strength on kD was conducted between 4 mM and 40 mM, with small increments in ionic strength. The reason for this is explained in the next few lines. At pH 4.0 and 5.4, kD exhibits a steep decrease with increasing ionic strength consistent with decreasing repulsive PPI. At pH 9.0, an increase in kD is observed with ionic strength, although it stays negative. The behavior at pH 9.0 is consistent with decreasing attractive PPI. However, even at the highest ionic strength studied, kD does not increase as much or the interactions do not become as repulsive as those exhibited by pH 4.0 and 5.4 solutions at ionic strengths below
20 mM. Another observation from Fig. 5 is the fact that the effect of pH on solution behavior of IgG2 is more or less neutralized by 40 mM salt, i.e., the value of kD
constant value (1.0 ml/gm in this case) for all the pH studied. Thus, to study the true effect of ionic strength, more salt concentrations were studied in this narrow range from 4 m to 40 mM. Between the ionic strength of 60 mM300 mM, kD can be observed to be almost constant.
|
|
) as a function of concentration. The center-center interparticle distance decreases with increasing concentration. For IgG molecules, this distance is
22 nm at 20 mg/ml and reduces to 12 nm at 120 mg/ml, which is close to the average hydrodynamic size of the molecule. This would signify that at the highest concentration used in our work, surfaces of the molecules are in close proximity to each other, which would enhances the probability of molecular collisions and formation of higher order species of a monomer. The small separation distance also enhances the magnitude of attractive forces including van der Waals and dipole interactions, which are short-range forces as compared to long-range charge-charge repulsive forces. Fig. 7 demonstrates the difference in dilute and concentrated solution behavior. The figure shows the change in IgG2 solution G', measured at 120 mg/ml, and kD values measured from relatively dilute solution analysis, for pH 9.0 solutions as a function of solution ionic strength. Both the parameters exhibit the maximum change with ionic strength up to 40 mM. However, between 40 and 300 mM, whereas solution kD changes insignificantly (signifying that attractive PPI existing at lower ionic strengths have already been neutralized by 40 mM ionic strength), solution G' continues to decrease (a scale break has been incorporated in the x axis in Fig. 7 to focus on low and high ionic strength regions). Similar correlation was observed for other solution pH as well (data not shown) wherein an increase in kD coincided with a decrease in G' and vice versa up to 40 mM ionic strength after which effect of ionic strength on kD saturates but G' continues to change with ionic strength. This phenomenon can also be observed from Fig. 6, where the effect of ionic strength, beyond 40 mM, on B22 (dilute solution) is much smaller than on solution G' (Fig. 4 a, concentrated solution).
|
| SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS |
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| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Submitted on August 11, 2006; accepted for publication September 19, 2006.
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