mAbs (Dec 2024)

Reduction of monoclonal antibody viscosity using interpretable machine learning

  • Emily K. Makowski,
  • Hsin-Ting Chen,
  • Tiexin Wang,
  • Lina Wu,
  • Jie Huang,
  • Marissa Mock,
  • Patrick Underhill,
  • Emma Pelegri-O’Day,
  • Erick Maglalang,
  • Dwight Winters,
  • Peter M. Tessier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19420862.2024.2303781
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACTEarly identification of antibody candidates with drug-like properties is essential for simplifying the development of safe and effective antibody therapeutics. For subcutaneous administration, it is important to identify candidates with low self-association to enable their formulation at high concentration while maintaining low viscosity, opalescence, and aggregation. Here, we report an interpretable machine learning model for predicting antibody (IgG1) variants with low viscosity using only the sequences of their variable (Fv) regions. Our model was trained on antibody viscosity data (>100 mg/mL mAb concentration) obtained at a common formulation pH (pH 5.2), and it identifies three key Fv features of antibodies linked to viscosity, namely their isoelectric points, hydrophobic patch sizes, and numbers of negatively charged patches. Of the three features, most predicted antibodies at risk for high viscosity, including antibodies with diverse antibody germlines in our study (79 mAbs) as well as clinical-stage IgG1s (94 mAbs), are those with low Fv isoelectric points (Fv pIs < 6.3). Our model identifies viscous antibodies with relatively high accuracy not only in our training and test sets, but also for previously reported data. Importantly, we show that the interpretable nature of the model enables the design of mutations that significantly reduce antibody viscosity, which we confirmed experimentally. We expect that this approach can be readily integrated into the drug development process to reduce the need for experimental viscosity screening and improve the identification of antibody candidates with drug-like properties.

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