Tag: <span>platform purification</span>

Current expression technologies have enabled the production of thousands of recombinant proteins in diverse production hosts. Therapeutic recombinant proteins have been engineered for a variety of purposes including reduced antigenicity, longer half-life, simplified process development, and increased affinity. Protein engineering has relied on various high throughput methods (e.g., directed evolution, phage display) to identify candidate proteins with the desired therapeutic properties. The physiological and biochemical diversity of native and engineered proteins reflects on the abundance of production hosts, expression tools, and different approaches for protein purification. Notably, a key step in high-throughput protein production is purification, which is a bottleneck where large numbers of samples are involved. Universal purification methods that can be applied to virtually any protein, and that are amenable to automation, can be used to address this problem…

Biologics Production

The outstanding success and safety record of first generation monoclonal products has created an immense increase in the number of product candidates that need to be evaluated clinically. The concept of platform purification has emerged in response to this need. A platform is a semigeneric, multistep purification procedure that can be applied to a wide range of monoclonal antibodies without extensive method-scouting and optimization. This approach can substantially accelerate process development and hasten inception of clinical trials…

Biologics Production