Conformational and Colloidal Stabilities of Isolated
Constant Domains of Human Immunoglobulin G and Their Impact on Antibody
Aggregation under Acidic Conditions
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Abstract
Antibody therapeutics are now in
widespread use and provide a new
approach for treating serious diseases such as rheumatic diseases
and cancer. Monoclonal antibodies used as therapeutic agents must
be of high quality, and their safety must be guaranteed. Aggregated
antibody is a degradation product that may be generated during the
manufacturing process. To maintain the high quality and safety of
antibody therapeutics, it is necessary to understand the mechanism
of aggregation and to develop technologies to strictly control aggregate
formation. Here, we extensively investigated the conformational and
colloidal characteristics of isolated antibody constant domains, and
provided insights into the molecular mechanism of antibody aggregation.
Isolated domains (CH2, CH3, CL, and CH1-CL dimer) of human immunoglobulin
G were synthesized, solubilized using 49 sets of solution conditions
(pH 2β8 and 0β300 mM NaCl), and characterized using
circular dichroism, intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence, and dynamic
light scattering. Salt-induced conformational changes and oligomer
formation were kinetically analyzed by NaCl-jump measurements (from
0 to 300 mM at pH 3). Phase diagrams revealed that the domains have
different conformational and colloidal stabilities. The unfolded fractions
of CH3 and CH2 at pH 3 were larger than that of CL and CH1-CL dimer.
The secondary and tertiary structures and particle sizes of CH3 and
CH2 showed that, in non-native states, these domains were sensitive
to salt concentration. Kinetic analyses suggest that oligomer formation
by CH3 and CH2 proceeds through partially refolded conformations.
The colloidal stability of CH3 in non-native states is the lowest
of the four domains under the conditions tested. We propose that the
impact of IgG constant domains on aggregation follows the order CH3
> CH2 > CH1-CL dimer > CL; furthermore, we suggest that CH3
plays
the most critical role in driving intact antibody aggregation under
acidic conditions