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Protein Stability during Processing: Challenges and Strategies

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Title: Protein Stability during Processing: Challenges and Strategies


1
Protein Stability during ProcessingChallenges
and Strategies
  • Mark Cornell Manning
  • Legacy BioDesign LLC
  • May 17, 2007

Legacy BioDesign, LLC
2
Acknowledgments
  • Legacy BioDesign Susan Manning James
    Matsuura Cody Van Pelt
  • Charles S. Henry, Robert W. Payne, Joseph J.
    Valente (Colorado State University)
  • W. William Wilson (Mississippi State Univ.)

Legacy BioDesign, LLC
3
Increased Demands on Biopharmaceuticals
  • Stability for two years in an aqueous solution
  • Move to higher concentration formulations (to
    increase the dose that can be given
    subcutaneously)
  • Search for methods that predict aggregation
    behavior upon storage
  • Rapid throughput needed during formulation
    development
  • Need ability to develop multiple candidates at
    once

4
Process Development (PD) Weve Got Trouble
  • Processing steps place an inordinate strain on
    proteins, causing both physical and chemical
    damage
  • These stresses lower yields and reduce product
    quality
  • Controlling aggregation is the major concern
  • Each unit operation presents a different challenge

5
PD So, What Do We Do?
  • We need a plan (importance of strategy)
  • We need allies (draw upon knowledge in other
    groups)
  • We need data (have better analytical methods in
    the right places PAT approaches)
  • We need insight (seminars, short courses, and
    most of all, read a lot!)
  • We need new tools (use emerging technologies)

6
The Enemy Within Aggregation
  • How do we deal with aggregation? Better
    detection Better quantitation Better
    mechanistic understanding
  • What drives aggregation? Loss of
    conformational stability Unfavorable colloidal
    stability Interfacial damage

7
Conformational vs. Colloidal Stability
  • Both conformational and colloidal stability are
    important factors governing protein aggregation
  • N D aggregate conformationa
    l shift equilibrium from D to N colloidal keep
    D from associating
  • Minimizing aggregation depends on reducing
    protein-protein interactions and stabilizing the
    native state

8
Colloidal Behavior of Proteins
  • Proteins are large enough to display colloidal
    properties
  • Interaction between protein molecules can be
    repulsive or attractive
  • These interactions affect important solution
    properties and processes, such as solubility,
    viscosity, crystallization and aggregation

9
Colloidal Behavior of Proteins
  • Osmotic second virial coefficient (B22) provides
    quantitative measure of colloidal stability
  • Positive value indicates repulsion, whereas
    negative value indicates attraction between
    protein molecules
  • Interaction forces include hard-sphere,
    electrostatic, van der Waals and any other short
    range interactions

10
Methods of Measuring B22
  • Typically, measured by static light scattering
    (SLS)
  • SLS methods are labor-, time- and
    material-intensive
  • Now B22 can be measured by self-interaction
    chromatographic (SIC) methods (Patro and
    Przybycien, Biotechnol. Bioeng. 1996, 52 193-203
    Tessier et al., Proteins 2003, 50 303-311)
  • SIC provides a rapid throughput method of B22
    determinations to optimize solubility (Valente et
    al., Curr. Pharm. Biotechnol. 2005, 6 427-436)

11
Self-Interaction Chromatography (SIC)
Garcia et al., Biotechnol. Prog. 2003, 19575-579
12
B22 Measurements by SIC/SLS
Valente et al., Biophys. J. 2005, 89 4211-4218
13
pH-Solubility Curve for Ribonuclease A
pI value 3.5
2
6
10
Schmittschmitt and Scholtz, Protein Sci. 2003,
12 2374-2378
14
pH-Solubility Correlation
Payne et al., Biopolymers (Pept. Sci.) 2006, 84
527-533
15
Effect of pH on B22
pI 7.8
Six injections per condition SIC run time about 6
min. Entire pH profile can be done in one day
Henry, Payne, Ramsay, Wilson and Manning,
unpublished
16
Effect of Colloidal Stability on Non-native
Protein Aggregation
  • In general, conformational stability is the most
    influential factor in modulating aggregation
  • Solution conditions (e.g., pH and ionic strength)
    can greatly affect protein aggregation rate,
    independent of effects on conformational
    stability by modulating intermolecular
    interactions
  • References Krishnan et al., Biochemistry 2002,
    41 6422 Chi et al., Protein Sci. 2003, 12 903
    Ho et al., Protein Sci. 2003, 12 708

17
Summary B22 in Drug Development
  • B22 correlates with protein and peptide
    solubility
  • B22 appears to be important in controlling
    viscosity and aggregation behavior as well
  • B22 values can be rapidly determined by SIC and
    these values are consistent with values from SLS
  • Combined with experimental design, a B22 response
    surface could be mapped for various formulation
    parameters quite rapidly
  • Much easier to investigate temperature effects
    than with SLS

18
Summary B22 in Drug Development
  • For peptides, SIC is the only method that will
    provide B22 values. The success will be dependent
    on adequate immobilization on the column
  • Goal identify solution conditions that will
    provide adequate solubility/handling first
  • So, it is a great early stage tool for
    formulation development. It is also an important
    tool throughout process development

19
Membrane Fouling
  • Membrane fouling refers to the build up of
    protein on a membrane (as during aseptic
    processing and UF/DF operations)
  • Initial step is structural rearrangement (at the
    membrane or at the air-water interface)
  • As the protein builds up on the membrane, the
    pressure required to maintain flux increases
  • Significant literature on this topic

20
Membrane Fouling with hGH
Data suggest that more positive B22
values (further from pI) leads to less membrane
fouling the importance of colloidal stability
Maa and Hsu, Biotechnol. Bioeng. 1996, 50 319-328
21
Membrane Fouling with hGH
pH 7.3 plus 0.2 Tween
Surfactants retard fouling the importance of
interfacial stability
pH 6.8 plus 0.2 Tween
pH 7.3
pH 6.8
Maa and Hsu, Biotechnol. Bioeng. 1996, 50 319-328
22
Fouling of UF Membranes by BSA
  • UF flux was measured at four different pH and
    three different salt levels
  • Zeta potential of both the membrane and protein
    were measured
  • Strong (negative) correlation of BSA zeta
    potential with flux suggests that colloidal
    stability plays some role in membrane fouling

Salgin, Chem. Eng. Technol. 2007, 30 255-260
23
Membrane Fouling
  • Conformational stability affects surface
    adsorption (cf. Karlsson et al., J. Biol. Chem.
    2005, 280 25558 Wendorf et al., Biotechnol.
    Bioeng. 2004, 87 565)
  • Multiple pass through UF/DF pumps (Cromwell et
    al., AAPS J. 2006, 8(3) art. 66) and stirring
    speeds (Wan et al., Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2005, 90
    422) can increase protein aggregation
  • Control of membrane fouling requires attention to
    all three types of protein stabilization
    (conformational, colloidal, and interfacial)

IS THE DAMAGE DUE TO SHEAR?
24
What About Shear?
  • There has been an ongoing debate about the
    effects of shear on protein structure and
    stability for the past 25 years
  • The concerns are rising again with the use of
    high concentration formulations, faster filling
    machines, better analytical methodology, etc.
  • What do we know for sure about shear effects?

25
Effect of Shear on Protein Denaturation
  • Early literature suggested that shear could
    denature proteins (e.g., Charm and Wong, Enzyme
    Microb. Technol. 1981, 3 111-118 Reese and Ryu,
    Enzyme Microb. Technol. 1980, 2 239-240)
  • More recent studies have demonstrated that
    proteins are too small to achieve sufficient
    force to unfold them (e.g., Maa et al.,
    Biotechnol. Bioeng. 1997, 54 503-512 Speigel,
    Int. J. Food Sci. Technol. 1999, 34 523-531 Yu
    et al., Eur. J. Pharm. Sci. 2006, 27 9-18)

26
Effect of Shear on Protein Denaturation
  • Many shear studies are agitation studies (e.g.,
    Oliva et al., J. Pharm. Biomed. Analysis 2003,
    33 145-155 Byrne and Fitzpatrick, Biochem. Eng.
    J. 2002, 10 17-25 Colombie et al., Biotechnol.
    Lett. 2000, 22 277-283), where air-water
    interface is prevalent
  • The interactions of the protein with solid
    surfaces (tubing, membranes, etc.) is often
    ignored
  • Bottom line the literature is consistent with a
    view that shear denaturation does not occur
  • HOWEVER.

27
Shear Does Damage Some Proteins
  • There are clear cases where shear does appear to
    increase aggregation
  • If it is not due to shear denaturation, there
    must be other mechanisms involved
  • WHAT ARE THEY?
  • Shear (possibly via cavitation) can lead to
    radical formation and aggregation via S-S
    linkages (e.g., Morel et al., Biomacromolecules
    2002, 3 488-497 Maa and Hsu, Biotechnol.
    Bioeng. 1996, 51 458-465)

28
Shear Does Damage Some Proteins
  • Turbulent flow dislodging unfolded protein from
    surfaces (e.g., Santos et al., J. Food Eng. 2006,
    74 468-483), possibly producing prenuclei
  • Increased mixing by shear leads to increased
    growth rate for aggregates (e.g., Belmar-Beiny et
    al., J. Food Eng. 1993, 19 119-139 Simmons et
    al., J. Food Eng. 2007, 79 517-528)
  • Shear could dislodge foreign matter from
    surfaces. Many of these could lead to
    nucleation-dependent aggregation

29
Nucleation-dependent Aggregation
  • Observation For some protein systems, during
    isothermal incubation, there is no detectable
    protein precipitation for certain period of time
    (lag phase), followed by a rapid appearance of
    visible particles
  • Prenuclei can be damaged protein (oxidized,
    dimers, etc.) or foreign matter
  • Precipitation of numerous particles coated with
    adsorbed protein is a recipe for increased
    immunogenicity

30
Container-Induced Aggregation Pafase
  • Aggregation appears after prolonged storage (gt 6
    months) in liquid formulations
  • Not due to agitation
  • Not seen in lyophilized formulations
  • Effect of container and container handling
    (depyrogenation)
  • Aggregation is pH dependent
  • Glass shedding or delamination (demonstrated by
    seeding with glass nanoparticles)

Chi et al., J. Pharm. Sci. 2005, 94 256-274
31
Pafase Adsorption to Silica Nanoparticles
Chi et al., J. Pharm. Sci. 2005, 94 256-274
32
Issues with Frozen Solutions
  • Sounds simple to do
  • Many issues to consider with frozen solutions
  • Question Is the solution really frozen at 20
    C? Tg is usually below 20 C for most
    formulations
  • Product distribution issues (i.e., cold chain
    integrity)
  • Characterization (analytical) issues
  • Freeze concentration effects (up to 15- or
    20-fold). Franks (Cryo-Letters 1990, 1193)
    reports a 24-fold increase for freezing isotonic
    saline.

33
Issues with Frozen Solutions
  • Oxygen content can be more than 1000-fold higher
    in a partially frozen solution than at 0º C (and
    it is higher at 0 º C than at room temp.) cf.
    Wisniewski, BioPharm 1998, 11 50-60
  • Interfacial damage at water-ice interface
    (proportional to ice-water surface area cf.
    Chang et al., J. Pharm. Sci. 1996, 85 1325-1330)
  • Temperature dependence of cmc for surfactants
    (may not have enough Hillgren et al., Int. J.
    Pharm. 2002, 237 57-69)

34
Freezing Issues
  • Cold denaturation? A few reports catalase
    (Shikama and Yamazaki, Nature 1961, 190 83)
    ovalbumin (Koseki et al., J. Biochem. 1990, 107
    389)
  • Freezing rate effects on stability have been
    reported (Hsu et al., Pharm. Res. 1995, 12 69
    Sarciaux et al., J. Pharm. Sci. 1999, 88 1354
    Jiang and Nail, Eur. J. Pharm. Biopharm. 1998,
    45 249)

35
Degradation during Chromatography
  • Stabilization during chromatography is rarely
    considered
  • Focus on stabilizing buffers and pH
  • Interfacial damage?

Bondos and Bicknell, Analytical Biochem. 2003,
316 223-231
36
Degradation during HIC
  • Both HIC and RP are known to be denaturing to
    proteins
  • In the case of a-lactalbumin, the protein
    denatures on the surface, so both conformational
    stability and adsorption kinetics are important
  • Absence of salt leads to great adsorption and
    greater destabilization

Xiao et al., Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2006, 93
1177-1189
37
Degradation during IEC
  • Increased aggregation of g-globulin at pH 3.5-4.0
    is due to later eluting IgG2
  • IgG2 appears to be more aggregation prone at low
    pH than other IgGs
  • IgG2 also appears to be more hydrophobic

Lewis and Nail, Process Biochem. 1997, 32 279-283
38
Degradation during Elution from Protein A Columns
  • Protein A chromatography is an important method
    for purifying antibodies
  • Elution requires acidic conditions
  • Campath (alemtuzumab) aggregates extensively (
    25) when eluted at pH 3.2 (citrate buffer)

Phillips et al, Cytotherapy 2001, 3 233-242
39
Summary
  • Development of protein products is challenging,
    but new approaches can help address the most
    pressing PD challenges
  • Nearly all unit operations have the potential to
    damage your protein
  • Interfacial damage can range from imperceptible
    to catastrophic via nucleation-dependent
    aggregation
  • Conformational, colloidal and interfacial
    stability all impact the extent and rate of
    aggregation at membranes and surfaces
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