Literature DB >> 34299526

NMR Spectroscopy for Protein Higher Order Structure Similarity Assessment in Formulated Drug Products.

Deyun Wang1, You Zhuo2, Mike Karfunkle3, Sharadrao M Patil2, Cameron J Smith4, David A Keire5, Kang Chen2.   

Abstract

Peptide and protein drug molecules fold into higher order structures (HOS) in formulation and these folded structures are often critical for drug efficacy and safety. Generic or biosimilar drug products (DPs) need to show similar HOS to the reference product. The solution NMR spectroscopy is a non-invasive, chemically and structurally specific analytical method that is ideal for characterizing protein therapeutics in formulation. However, only limited NMR studies have been performed directly on marketed DPs and questions remain on how to quantitively define similarity. Here, NMR spectra were collected on marketed peptide and protein DPs, including calcitonin-salmon, liraglutide, teriparatide, exenatide, insulin glargine and rituximab. The 1D 1H spectral pattern readily revealed protein HOS heterogeneity, exchange and oligomerization in the different formulations. Principal component analysis (PCA) applied to two rituximab DPs showed consistent results with the previously demonstrated similarity metrics of Mahalanobis distance (DM) of 3.3. The 2D 1H-13C HSQC spectral comparison of insulin glargine DPs provided similarity metrics for chemical shift difference (Δδ) and methyl peak profile, i.e., 4 ppb for 1H, 15 ppb for 13C and 98% peaks with equivalent peak height. Finally, 2D 1H-15N sofast HMQC was demonstrated as a sensitive method for comparison of small protein HOS. The application of NMR procedures and chemometric analysis on therapeutic proteins offer quantitative similarity assessments of DPs with practically achievable similarity metrics.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mahalanobis distance; chemical shift difference; peak profile; relative peak height; similarity metrics

Year:  2021        PMID: 34299526     DOI: 10.3390/molecules26144251

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Molecules        ISSN: 1420-3049            Impact factor:   4.411


  1 in total

1.  Practical Applications of NMR to Solve Real-World Problems.

Authors:  Robert G Brinson
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2021-11-24       Impact factor: 4.411

  1 in total

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