| Literature DB >> 28787231 |
Karthik Pisupati1,2, Alexander Benet1,2, Yuwei Tian3, Solomon Okbazghi4, Jukyung Kang1,2, Michael Ford5, Sergei Saveliev6, K Ilker Sen7, Eric Carlson7, Thomas J Tolbert4, Brandon T Ruotolo3, Steven P Schwendeman1,2,8, Anna Schwendeman1,2.
Abstract
Remsima™ (infliximab) is the first biosimilar monoclonal antibody (mAb) approved by the European Medical Agency and the US Food and Drug Administration. Remsima™ is highly similar to its reference product, Remicade®, with identical formulation components. The 2 products, however, are not identical; Remsima™ has higher levels of soluble aggregates, C-terminal lysine truncation, and fucosylated glycans. To understand if these attribute differences could be amplified during forced degradation, solutions and lyophilized powders of the 2 products were subjected to stress at elevated temperature (40-60°C) and humidity (dry-97% relative humidity). Stress-induced aggregation and degradation profiles were similar for the 2 products and resulted in loss of infliximab binding to tumor necrosis factor and FcγRIIIa. Appearances of protein aggregates and hydrolysis products were time- and humidity-dependent, with similar degradation rates observed for the reference and biosimilar products. Protein powder incubations at 40°C/97% relative humidity resulted in partial mAb unfolding and increased asparagine deamidation. Minor differences in heat capacity, fluorescence, levels of subvisible particulates, deamidation and protein fragments were observed in the 2 stressed products, but these differences were not statistically significant. The protein solution instability at 60°C, although quite significant, was also similar for both products. Despite the small initial analytical differences, Remicade® and Remsima™ displayed similar degradation mechanisms and kinetics. Thus, our results show that the 2 products are highly similar and infliximab's primary sequence largely defines their protein instabilities compared with the limited influence of small initial purity and glycosylation differences in the 2 products.Entities:
Keywords: biosimilars; infliximab; ion mobility mass spectrometry; monoclonal antibodies; protein stability; stress degradation
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28787231 PMCID: PMC5627586 DOI: 10.1080/19420862.2017.1347741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAbs ISSN: 1942-0862 Impact factor: 5.857