| Literature DB >> 24516290 |
Brock C Roughton1, Lavanya K Iyer2, Esben Bertelsen3, Elizabeth M Topp2, Kyle V Camarda4.
Abstract
Lyophilization can induce aggregation in therapeutic proteins, but the relative importance of protein structure, formulation and processing conditions are poorly understood. To evaluate the contribution of protein structure to lyophilization-induced aggregation, fifteen proteins were co-lyophilized with each of five excipients. Extent of aggregation following lyophilization, measured using size-exclusion chromatography, was correlated with computational and biophysical protein structural descriptors via multiple linear regression. Descriptor selection was performed using exhaustive search and forward selection. The results demonstrate that, for a given excipient, extent of aggregation is highly correlated by eight to twelve structural descriptors. Leave-one-out cross validation showed that the correlations were able to successfully predict the aggregation for a protein "left out" of the data set. Selected descriptors varied with excipient, indicating both protein structure and excipient type contribute to lyophilization-induced aggregation. The results show some descriptors used to predict protein aggregation in solution are useful in predicting lyophilized protein aggregation.Entities:
Keywords: Aggregation prediction; Biologics; Lyophilization; Multiple linear regression; Protein formulation; Structural descriptors
Year: 2013 PMID: 24516290 PMCID: PMC3917556 DOI: 10.1016/j.compchemeng.2013.07.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Chem Eng ISSN: 0098-1354 Impact factor: 3.845