Electrostatically Mediated Attractive Self-Interactions and Reversible Self-Association of Fc-Fusion Proteins

Mol Pharm. 2024 Mar 4;21(3):1321-1333. doi: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.3c01009. Epub 2024 Feb 9.

Abstract

Attractive self-interactions and reversible self-association are implicated in many problematic solution behaviors for therapeutic proteins, such as irreversible aggregation, elevated viscosity, phase separation, and opalescence. Protein self-interactions and reversible oligomerization of two Fc-fusion proteins (monovalent and bivalent) and the corresponding fusion partner protein were characterized experimentally with static and dynamic light scattering as a function of pH (5 and 6.5) and ionic strength (10 mM to at least 300 mM). The fusion partner protein and monovalent Fc-fusion each displayed net attractive electrostatic self-interactions at pH 6.5 and net repulsive electrostatic self-interactions at pH 5. Solutions of the bivalent Fc-fusion contained higher molecular weight species that prevented quantification of typical interaction parameters (B22 and kD). All three of the proteins displayed reversible self-association at pH 6.5, where oligomers dissociated with increased ionic strength. Coarse-grained molecular simulations were used to model the self-interactions measured experimentally, assess net self-interactions for the bivalent Fc-fusion, and probe the specific electrostatic interactions between charged amino acids that were involved in attractive electrostatic self-interactions. Mayer-weighted pairwise electrostatic energies from the simulations suggested that attractive electrostatic self-interactions at pH 6.5 for the two Fc-fusion proteins were due to cross-domain interactions between the fusion partner domain(s) and the Fc domain.

Keywords: biopharmaceutical; fusion proteins; light scattering; protein aggregation; protein formulations; protein self-interactions.

MeSH terms

  • Amino Acids*
  • Antibodies, Monoclonal* / chemistry
  • Dynamic Light Scattering
  • Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
  • Osmolar Concentration

Substances

  • Antibodies, Monoclonal
  • Amino Acids