Abstract
Metal ions that leach into biotherapeutic drug product solution during manufacturing and storage, result in contamination that can cause physico-chemical degradation of the active molecule. In this review, we describe various mechanisms by which metal ion leachates can interact with therapeutic proteins and antibodies. Site-specific modifications due to metal catalyzed oxidation (MCO) of the therapeutic proteins cause them to become destabilized and potentially increasingly aggregation prone. We have examined the molecular sequences and structures for three case studies, human relaxin (hRlx), human growth hormone (hGH) and an IgG2 mAb to rationalize the experimental findings related to their MCO. The analysis indicates that metal-binding sites lie in close spatial proximities to predicted aggregation prone regions in these molecules. From the perspective of pharmaceutical development of biotherapeutic drugs, this link between molecular origins of MCO and subsequent aggregation is undesirable. This article further suggests molecular design strategies involving disruption of APRs that may also help mitigate the impact of metal ion leachates on biotherapeutic drug products as well as improving their solubility.
Keywords: Metal ion, aggregation, oxidation, protein, biotherapeutics.
Current Pharmaceutical Design
Title:Metal Ion Leachates and the Physico-Chemical Stability of Biotherapeutic Drug Products
Volume: 20 Issue: 8
Author(s): Sandeep Kumar, Shuxia Zhou and Satish K. Singh
Affiliation:
Keywords: Metal ion, aggregation, oxidation, protein, biotherapeutics.
Abstract: Metal ions that leach into biotherapeutic drug product solution during manufacturing and storage, result in contamination that can cause physico-chemical degradation of the active molecule. In this review, we describe various mechanisms by which metal ion leachates can interact with therapeutic proteins and antibodies. Site-specific modifications due to metal catalyzed oxidation (MCO) of the therapeutic proteins cause them to become destabilized and potentially increasingly aggregation prone. We have examined the molecular sequences and structures for three case studies, human relaxin (hRlx), human growth hormone (hGH) and an IgG2 mAb to rationalize the experimental findings related to their MCO. The analysis indicates that metal-binding sites lie in close spatial proximities to predicted aggregation prone regions in these molecules. From the perspective of pharmaceutical development of biotherapeutic drugs, this link between molecular origins of MCO and subsequent aggregation is undesirable. This article further suggests molecular design strategies involving disruption of APRs that may also help mitigate the impact of metal ion leachates on biotherapeutic drug products as well as improving their solubility.
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Cite this article as:
Kumar Sandeep, Zhou Shuxia and Singh K. Satish, Metal Ion Leachates and the Physico-Chemical Stability of Biotherapeutic Drug Products, Current Pharmaceutical Design 2014; 20 (8) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/13816128113199990063
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/13816128113199990063 |
Print ISSN 1381-6128 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1873-4286 |
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