Ligand binding assays (LBAs) used for large molecule drug development can necessitate conjugation of a drug to one or more different tags. To help ensure that LBAs utilizing conjugated drug reagents perform consistently over time and provide high quality data, each lot of conjugated material should be functionally and biophysically characterized prior to being incorporated into the LBA. One potential source of lot-to-lot variability is aggregation, which may be inherent to the drug, induced by the conjugation process and/or handling of the reagents.

SEC-MALS is a superior method for assessing the aggregate profiles of LBA reagents. Sample consumption for other available methods, such as analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC), is higher than SEC-MALS. This can be problematic in cases where very limited amounts of LBA reagent samples are available for testing. SEC-MALS is also higher throughput than AUC. Additionally, AUC sensitivity is confined by the concentration and UV extinction coefficient of the sample. In contrast, very low levels of high molecular weight (HMW) aggregates in LBA reagents can be detected using SEC-MALS because light scattering (LS) signal is proportional to the concentration and molar mass of the sample.

SEC-MALS is also preferable to SEC for this work because the molar masses of aggregate peaks are readily confirmed without additional complexities associated with SEC. Using SEC alone requires column calibration using MW standards (which must be performed in a separate run). Furthermore, SEC-derived molar masses can be inaccurate because variable/unpredictable nonspecific interactions between the sample and the base matrix of the column can occur, resulting in retention time shifts that do not correlate with molar mass.

DAWN®

DAWN®

The world’s most advanced light scattering instrument for absolute characterization of proteins, conjugates, macromolecules, and nanoparticles.

The DAWN and its companion Optilab dRI detector are the established benchmarks for MALS analysis, cited in thousands of peer-reviewed publications. Multi-angle light scattering detection is indispensable for use with GPC and HPLC-SEC in order to obtain reliable molecular mass distributions and information on molecular conformation, branching ratio, fragments and aggregates.

Optilab

Optilab

Universal Detection for Chromatography and FFF Separations

Using a combination of cutting-edge semiconductor photodiode technology and proprietary computer algorithms, the Optilab achieves an unprecedented combination of sensitivity and range. These features mean that it addresses both standard chromatographic applications and some challenges unique to light scattering measurements such as high concentrations, determination of sample refractive increments (dn/dc) and solvent refractive index.