Viral vectors and viral vaccines are invaluable tools in prevention and treatment of diseases. About 14% of vaccines approved by the FDA involve enveloped viruses, while out of the 15 gene therapy products approved worldwide in 2019, six of them use enveloped viruses, and 39% of gene therapy clinical trials are using enveloped viruses. Enveloped viruses are encased in a lipid bilayer which, in most cases, fuses with the target host cell membrane to infect cells. These enveloped viruses are produced in various systems, including traditional embryonated chicken eggs or more advanced cell culture technologies such as MRC-5 cells, Vero cells and HEK293-derived cell lines. The manufacturing of viral vector and viral vaccine products has always been paved with challenges related to the downstream processing. Purification process unit operations usually start with harvest and clarification, followed by intermediate purification steps, before polishing and formulation steps. Although techniques have greatly improved over the years to generate purer high-quality products and reproducible processes while maintaining or decreasing the cost of goods, regulatory agencies are increasingly stringent regarding product identity and characterization of the end products and level of acceptable impurities as a way to ensure public safety and maintain public trust in this class of medicine.
Figure 2
Figure 2.
Centrifugation is a common way to remove cells and large cellular debris by pelleting them. It is still used broadly despite the high cost and difficulty to scale up as it offers good recovery [1]. Based on their lower density, viruses and EVs are therefore both recovered in the supernatant during this step.
Different types of filters can be used in NFF: dead-end filters and depth filters. Dead-end filters have defined pore sizes, and excluded particles are retained only at the surface, whereas depth filters are made of porous material, which can retain particles of different sizes across the membrane’s thickness [2], rendering membrane fouling less problematic. Depth filters can also be positively charged to effectively capture host cell DNA and HCPs. Both types of filters have the advantage of being easy to scale up and cost-effectiveness. A scalable process using a dual 0.45–0.2 µm filter has been proposed to clarify retroviral vectors produced in HEK293-derived cells [3]. NFF has also been used effectively for decades in the clarification process of influenza virus produced in embryonated chicken eggs [4].
In TFF, biological fluids recirculate in parallel to the membrane surface, preventing cake formation. Particles smaller than the pore size flow through the membrane in the permeate, while larger particles are retained by the membrane and are recovered in the retentate. TFF is also a highly scalable method and has been successfully implemented in the manufacturing process of smallpox and monkeypox vaccine JYNNEOS [5].
In the field of gene therapy, lentiviral vectors have been concentrated and partially purified using ultracentrifugation [6]. Iodixanol gradients [7] or sucrose cushions [8] have been used for purifying lentivirus preparations. Ultracentrifugation steps using sucrose gradients have also been used to purify retrovirus [9].
In the field of vaccines, ultracentrifugation and zonal-rate separation on sucrose cushions has been used widely for the purification of influenza virus. The FluMist vaccine, for example, employs ultracentrifugation in the production process. Japanese Encephalitis virus for the preparation of Ixiaro vaccine is purified using sucrose density gradients [10].
In the field of EVs, differential ultracentrifugation was for a while the gold standard to isolate EVs [11], with sequential steps of increased centrifugal force. It is no longer the method of choice, however, as it is cumbersome, induces higher variability than other techniques and has been shown to damage and aggregate EVs [12]. Ultracentrifugation with sucrose or iodixanol gradients is another popular approach to isolating EVs [13].
Ultracentrifugation using continuous density gradients is limited by the volume that can be processed (usually less than 50 mL); it is therefore mostly used for pre-clinical material or small-scale research samples. Continuous-flow centrifugation overcomes this volume limitation and is still being used at a large scale in vaccine manufacturing, especially in the case of influenza vaccine and Japanese encephalitis vaccine. However, it does not translate well for lentiviral vectors, which are subject to a loss of infectivity by ultracentrifugation with or without sucrose gradients [14]. Continuous-flow centrifugation equipment is also high-maintenance, costly and voluminous. Moreover, due to the overlapping density of EVs and viruses, effective separation cannot be achieved. Ultracentrifugation is therefore not a suitable method to separate enveloped viruses from EVs, and viral manufacturing processes that rely on ultracentrifugation in downstream processing should expect retention of EVs in the bulk product if an additional step segregating the two entities is not considered.
Ultrafiltration (UF) is another membrane separation technique with tighter pore sizes than in microfiltration, usually ranging from 1 to 100 nm. It is most commonly used in TFF mode to concentrate the products of interest, and combined with diafiltration (DF), it allows buffer exchange. This well-controlled and scalable technology induces very low shear stress, which makes it very popular in various biomanufacturing processes. UF/DF is widely used in the field of influenza virus production [15] using different membrane molecular weight cut-offs (MWCO), from 100 to 750 kDa. UF/DF is also a method of choice in the purification of retroviral and lentiviral vectors using 100 to 300 kDa membranes [16][17]. UF/DF has also been employed in the field of EVs, especially for its scalability advantage [18][19].
Alternative chromatographic supports are convective media such as membrane adsorbers and monoliths through which processing time, capacity and recovery are improved for viral processes rendering them more cost effective. Membrane adsorbers are a combination of liquid chromatography and membrane filtration [20]. They offer reduced diffusion times compared to packed-bed chromatography, with high flow rate operation capabilities and low pressure drops. The low dead volume of the system also yields reduced buffer consumption. Although reusability is always an option, another advantage of membrane adsorbers resides in their suggested single-use format, removing the need for lengthy validated clean-in-place and regeneration procedures and eliminating the risk of cross-contamination. Membrane adsorbers have been successfully used for scalable processes of lentiviral and retroviral vectors with high titers [21].
The disposability advantage also goes for monoliths. Monoliths, also known as convective interaction media (CIM) are made of porous materials organized in a single block with highly cross-linked macropores with a diameter range of 10 to 4000 nm [22]. Similar to membrane chromatography, mass transport is essentially convective, allowing high flow rates and low pressure drops. Most chromatographic monoliths are made of polymethacrylate material and are operated at a large scale with radial flow devices. Monoliths have shown great performance in the purification of influenza virus and lentiviral vectors as compared to other chromatographic means [23]. Rubella virus is another example of an enveloped viral vaccine and has been efficiently concentrated and purified using a monolith with almost 100% recovery and maintained infectivity [24].
Ion-exchange chromatography (IEX) is the most commonly used technique and is based on difference in charge between the viral envelope and the stationary phase. It is mostly operated in bind-elute mode. IEX usually offers high resolution especially when using elution gradients to fractionate closely related biomolecules. Depending on the particle of interest’s net charge, either anion or cation exchange is employed. Most viruses are negatively charged at physiological pH due to their isoelectric point (pI) being below 7.4. Interestingly, egg-derived influenza virus has been purified by both anion-exchange (AIEX) and cation-exchange (CIEX) chromatography, although AIEX was more favorable [15]. Lentiviral vectors, as well as retroviral vectors have been purified at a large scale using AEX, yielding 22% to over 60% of recovery of infectious particles [6][16].
The use of hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) is scarcer. It is mainly known for the purification of vaccinia virus [25]. The reason behind the low popularity of the method is due to the high salt concentration used for desorption, which can be detrimental to the virus integrity and functionality, especially in the case of viral vectors used in gene therapy.
Affinity chromatography (AC) separation is based on specific interactions between the particles of interest and the stationary phase and is used in bind-elute mode. It has attracted interest in recent years. The advantage of AC is the high specificity of the interaction, yielding highly pure product in one step. Mechanisms of affinity include specific antigen–antibody interactions, which, when employed for the purification of measles virus [26], outperformed ultracentrifugation. Mumps virus purification using AC with a monolithic column coupled with polyclonal antibodies is another example [27]. Lectin affinity chromatography uses lectin ligands binding to specific carbohydrates via carbohydrate recognition domains. It was used in the purification of influenza A virus [28] and in the purification of HSV-1 [29]. Immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) is based on metal ion affinity such as zinc, cobalt, nickel or a combination of copper, cobalt and nickel and is used for the purification of influenza virus [30], HSV-1 [31], retroviral vectors [32] and lentiviral vectors [33], respectively. An additional example of AC mechanism is based on heparin affinity and has been very popular for the purification of many enveloped viruses, including HSV-1, vaccinia Ankara virus and retroviral and lentiviral vectors [34]. Despite the great performance of AC, it is not often implemented at a large scale due to the high cost of ligand design and immobilization.
Mixed-mode chromatography (MMC) is based on the combination of various multimodal binding mechanisms, such as ligands combining ionic interaction, hydrophobic interaction and hydrogen bonding. Hydroxyapatite, a complex crystalline compound, which resin binds at the same time negatively charged phosphate groups and positively charged functional groups, is a good example of MMC. It has shown recovery of up to 46% in the purification of retroviral vectors [35].
In the field of EVs, the use of AIEX has also been reported to efficiently isolate EVs from HEK293T cell cultures [36]. No studies attempting to separate viruses from coproduced EVs have been reported thus far. Despite the sizeable challenge, as charges between intermediate entities can exhibit slight differences, the possibility thus remains that this technique could separate EVs from viruses, as a recent study in another context showed the feasibility of separating full and empty adeno-associated virus (AAV) capsids [37].
When approaching AC techniques in the field of EVs, immunoaffinity appears appealing and has been widely employed in the isolation of EVs from cell culture or body fluids [38]. Tetraspanin proteins found at the surface of EVs are often reported as target molecules. However, specificity has not been demonstrated for efficient separation of EVs from viruses. Indeed, tetraspanins were also associated with viruses, such as CD63 with retroviral vectors and CD81 with lentiviral vectors [18][39]. Distinctive markers have yet to be accurately identified, and they may differ depending on the expression system and the produced enveloped virus. As documented in previous studies, EVs coproduced with enveloped viruses carry similar membrane proteins, and more extensive studies would be needed to identify and validate any specific markers that would enable separation of these two entities.
Size exclusion chromatography (SEC) is the most commonly used chromatographic technique, based on the molecular size difference between the particle of interest and the impurities. SEC is used for example in the late-stage purification of lentiviral vectors [40]. Although still broadly used, SEC induces dilution of the final product and has usually low capacity.
Another MMC example used for polishing is the combination of size exclusion and binding properties of the Capto™ Core 700 and 400 resins. These are used in flow-through mode as the particles of interest are recovered in the flow-through, while impurities bind to the high-capacity column. It was originally designed for the removal of ovalbumin in the purification of influenza virus produced in eggs [41] but has since been applied to other viruses such as lentiviral vectors [40].
SEC and more recently Capto™ Core have been successfully implemented in the isolation processes of EVs [19][38][42].