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Integrated Autolysis, DNA Hydrolysis and Precipitation Enables an Improved Bioprocess for Q-Griffithsin, a Broad-Spectrum Antiviral and Clinical-Stage anti-COVID-19 Candidate.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Decker, JS; Menacho-Melgar, R; Lynch, MD
Published in: bioRxiv
January 3, 2022

UNLABELLED: Across the biomanufacturing industry, innovations are needed to improve efficiency and flexibility, especially in the face of challenges such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Here we report an improved bioprocess for Q-Griffithsin, a broad-spectrum antiviral currently in clinical trials for COVID-19. Q-Griffithsin is produced at high titer in E. coli and purified to anticipated clinical grade without conventional chromatography or the need for any fixed downstream equipment. The process is thus both low-cost and highly flexible, facilitating low sales prices and agile modifications of production capacity, two key features for pandemic response. The simplicity of this process is enabled by a novel unit operation that integrates cellular autolysis, autohydrolysis of nucleic acids, and contaminant precipitation, giving essentially complete removal of host cell DNA as well as reducing host cell proteins and endotoxin by 3.6 and 2.4 log 10 units, respectively. This unit operation can be performed rapidly and in the fermentation vessel, such that Q-GRFT is obtained with 100% yield and >99.9% purity immediately after fermentation and requires only a flow-through membrane chromatography step for further contaminant removal. Using this operation or variations of it may enable improved bioprocesses for a range of other high-value proteins in E. coli . HIGHLIGHTS: Integrating autolysis, DNA hydrolysis and precipitation enables process simplificationAutolysis reduces endotoxin release and burden to purificationQ-Griffithsin recovered from fermentation vessel at >99.9% purity and 100% yieldQ-Griffithsin purified to anticipated clinical grade without conventional chromatographyThe resulting bioprocess is 100% disposables-compatible, scalable, and low-cost.

Duke Scholars

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

January 3, 2022

Location

United States
 

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

January 3, 2022

Location

United States