Recombinant Protein Bioprocessing Solutions

On this page:

Enhance recombinant protein purification with chromatography

Recombinant therapeutic proteins—including hormones, enzymes, and fusion proteins—require chromatography-based downstream purification workflows that can vary significantly by target molecule. Selective chromatography technologies, such as target-specific affinity chromatography and affinity tagging via C-tag platform purification, can support higher yields and purities per batch. This helps reduce the total number of downstream processing steps, therefore reducing costs. The CaptureSelect affinity portfolio and POROS polishing resins are designed to address these needs from bench-scale research through commercial GMP manufacturing.


Purification complexity across protein targets

Recombinant protein targets span a wide range of physicochemical properties, presenting distinct challenges at each stage of downstream processing (DSP).

 

Molecular size, surface charge, and hydrophobicity vary considerably across the therapeutic protein landscape from smaller hormones such as human growth hormone (hGH), to large, heavily glycosylated proteins such as follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). Expression system selection further complicates the purification strategy, as different host cell systems, such as bacterial, yeast, insect, or mammalian, generate distinct host cell protein (HCP) impurity profiles that must be addressed in the downstream workflow.

 

Without a selective capture step, purification workflows typically require multiple sequential chromatography and intermediate processing steps. As a result, development timelines extend, process complexity increases, and production costs rise.


Benefits of affinity-based purification

Three primary purification strategy approaches are available for recombinant proteins: 

  • Traditional functionalized chromatography resins, such as ion exchange (IEX) and hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC), can achieve adequate purity but require multiple sequential steps.
  • Target-specific affinity resin development, in which a resin is designed against a known protein target, can enable single-step, high-purity capture from complex feedstocks.
  • The C-tag platform enables affinity purification of tagged recombinant proteins when no target-specific resin is available.

Affinity-based approaches can reduce the number of purification steps, increase product yield, reduce bioprocess development time, and lower overall cost of goods. CaptureSelect affinity resins use VHH single-domain antibody fragments as ligands, produced through an animal origin-free (AOF) process.


Affinity capture for recombinant protein purification

The CaptureSelect affinity chromatography resin portfolio is designed to serve as the capture-step solution across a range of recombinant protein purification workflows. The portfolio includes target-specific affinity resins developed for individual recombinant protein targets, organized by protein class.

Polishing steps in recombinant protein manufacturing

Following affinity capture with CaptureSelect resins, process-related impurities, including HCPs, host DNA, aggregates, product variants, endotoxins, and residual impurities from the expression system, must be addressed in one or more downstream polishing steps. POROS IEX, HIC, and Mixed-mode chromatography (MMC) resins are designed for these polishing applications.

Depending on the target and impurity profiles, one to three polishing steps are typically required to meet the purity and molecular quality specifications for clinical or commercial use. The POROS resin platform is characterized by high binding capacity, high resolution, rigid poly(styrene-divinylbenzene) backbone, and chemical stability even under stringent clean-in-place (CIP) regimes.

Explore custom chromatography resin development

Increasing molecular complexity, closely related impurities, and heterogeneous feedstreams can quickly expose the limits of standard chromatography resins.

 

Custom chromatography resin development services may be an option when standard chromatography resins have been fully evaluated.

Chromatography resources


Access resources that cover chromatography performance, purification strategies, and method development. These resources empower scientists to select and apply chromatography resins from research to cGMP manufacturing.

Frequently asked questions

CaptureSelect affinity resins for hormone purification include CaptureSelect FSH (follicle-stimulating hormone) Affinity Matrix, CaptureSelect hCG (human chorionic gonadotropin) Affinity Matrix, CaptureSelect hGH (human growth hormone) Affinity Matrix, CaptureSelect TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone) Affinity Matrix, and CaptureSelect EPO (erythropoietin) Affinity Matrix. Each resin uses a VHH nanobody ligand designed for high selectivity to its specific hormone target, enabling single-step capture from cell culture harvests. Bioprocess-grade resins include corresponding ligand leakage ELISAs.

The C-tag system uses a four-amino acid peptide tag (E-P-E-A) incorporated at the C-terminus of the target protein during expression construct design. CaptureSelect C-tagXL Affinity Matrix then captures C-tagged proteins with high affinity and selectivity from complex feedstocks, including cell culture harvests and periplasmic fractions. This approach is well-suited for recombinant proteins for which no target-specific affinity resin is available in the catalog, offering a versatile single-resin platform for diverse protein targets.

Yes, CaptureSelect and POROS resins are fully scalable to commercial GMP manufacturing and can be used in large production columns. They are available in research-scale screening formats, including RoboColumns™, GoPure plates, and MiniChrom™ columns, and in bioprocess-scale bulk quantities, using the same resin chemistry at each stage of development. Select products in this portfolio are suited for commercial GMP manufacturing and clinical-stage use.

Following affinity capture, POROS ion exchange chromatography resins are designed to separate impurities from target molecules based on charge differences. POROS XS and POROS 50 HS are used for cation exchange, while POROS 50 HQ and POROS XQ are used for anion exchange. POROS HIC resins, such as POROS Ethyl, POROS Benzyl, and POROS Benzyl Ultra, allow the separation of impurities and target molecules based on hydrophobicity differences. POROS Caprylate Mixed-Mode Cation Exchange Resin has a ligand with both charge and hydrophobicity characteristics, offering an additional tool to help achieve desired separation. Resin selection depends on the target protein's physicochemical properties and the impurity profile generated by the expression system.

Where the same or comparable resin chemistry is available in both research and bioprocess formats, the transition from a research-scale resin to a bioproduction-scale resin can follow a structured scale-up and process transfer pathway. Because the same ligand chemistry and base matrix are used across formats, process characterization data generated at the research scale can support method development and regulatory documentation at the production scale, helping reduce re-development time.

Not sure which resins are right for you?


Selecting the right resin depends on your molecule type, process stage, and purification goals. Compare chemistries, binding capacities, and scalability data in one place.
 


For research and development use only in support of FDA-regulated end uses. Not for diagnostic use or direct administration to humans or animals.