The purpose of this study was to evaluate the importance of prelyophilization solution pH on the stability of botulinum neurotoxin, serotype A (rBoNTA(H c )). This understanding is of significant importance for proteins such as rBoNTA(H c ), a potential constituent of a multivalent vaccine product.
Effect of glycine on pH changes and protein stability during freeze–thawing in phosphate buffer systems
✍ Scribed by Katherine A. Pikal-Cleland; Jeffrey L. Cleland; Thomas J. Anchordoquy; John F. Carpenter
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 180 KB
- Volume
- 91
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
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✦ Synopsis
Previous studies have established that the selective precipitation of a less soluble buffer component during freezing can induce a significant pH shift in the freeze concentrate. During freezing of sodium phosphate solutions, crystallization of the disodium salt can produce a pH decrease as great as 3 pH units which can dramatically affect protein stability. The objective of our study was to determine how the presence of glycine (0-500 mM), a commonly used bulking agent in pharmaceutical protein formulations, affects the pH changes normally observed during freezing in sodium phosphate buffer solutions and to determine whether these pH changes contribute to instability of model proteins in glycine/phosphate formulations. During freezing in sodium phosphate buffers, the presence of glycine significantly influenced the pH. Glycine at the lower concentrations (< or = 50 mM) suppressed the pH decrease normally observed during freezing in 10 and 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, possibly by reducing the nucleation rate of salt and thereby decreasing the extent of buffer salt crystallization. The presence of glycine at higher concentration (> 100 mM) in the sodium phosphate buffer resulted in a more complete crystallization of the disodium salt as indicated by the frozen pH values closer to the equilibrium value (pH 3.6). Although high concentrations of glycine can facilitate more buffer salt crystallization and these pH shifts may prove to be potentially damaging to the protein, glycine, in its amorphous state, can also act to stabilize a protein via the preferential exclusion mechanism.
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