Rational design and experimental evaluation of peptide ligands for the purification of adeno‐associated viruses via affinity chromatography

Author:

Shastry Shriarjun12,Chu Wenning1ORCID,Barbieri Eduardo1,Greback‐Clarke Paul2,Smith William K.2,Cummings Christopher2,Minzoni Arianna1,Pancorbo Jennifer2,Gilleskie Gary2,Ritola Kimberly34,Daniele Michael A.45,Johnson Thomas F.6,Menegatti Stefano1247ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering North Carolina State University Raleigh North Carolina USA

2. Biomanufacturing Training and Education Center (BTEC) North Carolina State University Raleigh North Carolina USA

3. Neuroscience Center, Brain Initiative Neurotools Vector Core University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

4. North Carolina Viral Vector Initiative in Research and Learning (NC‐VVIRAL) North Carolina State University Raleigh North Carolina USA

5. Joint Department of Biomedical Engineering North Carolina State University and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Raleigh North Carolina USA

6. Department of Biochemical Engineering University College London London UK

7. LigaTrap Technologies LLC Raleigh North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractAdeno‐associated viruses (AAVs) have acquired a central role in modern medicine as delivery agents for gene therapies targeting rare diseases. While new AAVs with improved tissue targeting, potency, and safety are being introduced, their biomanufacturing technology is lagging. In particular, the AAV purification pipeline hinges on protein ligands for the affinity‐based capture step. While featuring excellent AAV binding capacity and selectivity, these ligands require strong acid (pH <3) elution conditions, which can compromise the product's activity and stability. Additionally, their high cost and limited lifetime has a significant impact on the price tag of AAV‐based therapies. Seeking to introduce a more robust and affordable affinity technology, this study introduces a cohort of peptide ligands that (i) mimic the biorecognition activity of the AAV receptor (AAVR) and anti‐AAV antibody A20, (ii) enable product elution under near‐physiological conditions (pH 6.0), and (iii) grant extended reusability by withstanding multiple regenerations. A20‐mimetic CYIHFSGYTNYNPSLKSC and AAVR‐mimetic CVIDGSQSTDDDKIC demonstrated excellent capture of serotypes belonging to distinct clones/clades – namely, AAV1, AAV2, AAV5, AAV6, AAV8, and AAV9. This corroborates the in silico models documenting their ability to target regions of the viral capsid that are conserved across all serotypes. CVIDGSQSTDDDKIC‐Toyopearl resin features binding capacity (≈1014 vp mL−1) and product yields (≈60%–80%) on par with commercial adsorbents, and purifies AAV2 from HEK293 and Sf9 cell lysates with high recovery (up to 78%), reduction of host cell proteins (up to 700‐fold), and high transduction activity (up to 65%).

Funder

North Carolina State University

Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, and Transport Systems

U.S. Food and Drug Administration

NoVo Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Molecular Medicine,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine

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