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Microheterogeneity in frozen protein solutions.

International journal of pharmaceutics (2015-04-19)
Alan Twomey, Kosaku Kurata, Yutaka Nagare, Hiroshi Takamatsu, Alptekin Aksan
RÉSUMÉ

In frozen and lyophilized systems, the biological to be stabilized (e.g. therapeutic protein, biomarker, drug-delivery vesicle) and the cryo-/lyo-protectant should be co-localized for successful stabilization. During freezing and drying, many factors cause physical separation of the biological from the cryo-/lyo-protectant, called microheterogeneity (MH), which may result in poor stabilization efficiency. We have developed a novel technique that utilized confocal Raman microspectroscopy in combination with counter-gradient freezing to evaluate the effect of a wide range of freezing temperatures (-20<TF<0°C) on the MH generated within a frozen formulation in only a few experiments. The freezing experiments conducted with a model system (albumin and trehalose) showed the presence of different degrees of MH in the freeze-concentrated liquid (FCL) in all solutions tested. Mainly, albumin tended to accumulate near the ice interface, where it was physically separated from the cryoprotectant. In frozen 10wt% trehalose solutions, heterogeneity in FCL was relatively low at any TF. In frozen 20wt% trehalose solutions, the optimum albumin to trehalose ratio in the FCL can only be ensured if the solution was frozen within a narrow range of temperatures (-16<TF<-10°C). In the 30wt% trehalose solutions, freezing within a much more narrow range (-12<TF<-10°C) was needed to ensure a fairly homogeneous FCL. The method developed here will be helpful for the development of uniformly frozen and stable formulations and freezing protocols for biological as MH is presumed to directly impact stability.

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Sigma-Aldrich
D-(+)-Tréhalose dihydrate, ≥99% (HPLC), from Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Sigma-Aldrich
D-(+)-Tréhalose dihydrate, from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, powder, BioReagent, suitable for cell culture, suitable for insect cell culture, ≥99%
Sigma-Aldrich
D-(+)-Tréhalose dihydrate, ≥99% (HPLC), from starch
Sigma-Aldrich
D-(+)-Tréhalose dihydrate, ≥98.5% (HPLC), from Saccharomyces cerevisiae