## Abstract Statistical thermodynamic theories have been developed in order to explore the consequences of two prominent models of length regulation in linear protein aggregates: the lengthβdetermining factor model and the cumulated strain model. In the former, the possibility that the final subuni
Equilibrium studies of protein aggregates and homogeneous nucleation in protein formulation
β Scribed by Sylvia Kiese; Astrid Pappenberger; Wolfgang Friess; Hanns-Christian Mahler
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 335 KB
- Volume
- 99
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
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β¦ Synopsis
Shaking or heat stress may induce protein aggregates. Aggregation behavior of an IgG1 stressed by shaking or heat following static storage at 5 and 25 degrees C was investigated to determine whether protein aggregates exist in equilibrium. Aggregates were detected using different analytical methods including visual inspection, turbidity, light obscuration, size exclusion chromatography, and dynamic light scattering. Significant differences were evident between shaken and heated samples upon storage. Visible and subvisible particles (insoluble aggregates), turbidity and z-average diameter decreased whilst soluble aggregate content increased in shaken samples over time. Insoluble aggregates were considered to be reversible and dissociate into soluble aggregates and both aggregate types existed in equilibrium. Heat-induced aggregates had a denatured protein structure and upon static storage, no significant change in insoluble aggregates content was shown, whilst changes in soluble aggregates content occurred. This suggested that heat-induced insoluble aggregates were irreversible and not in equilibrium with soluble aggregates. Additionally, the aggregation behavior of unstressed IgG1 after spiking with heavily aggregated material (shaken or heat stressed) was studied. The aggregation behavior was not significantly altered, independent of the spiking concentration over time. Thus, neither mechanically stressed native nor temperature-induced denatured aggregates were involved in nucleating or propagating aggregation.
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## Abstract Soluble protein fluid collections ranging from 0.5 to 21 gm/l00 ml and collections of protein microaggregates with a particle size less than 700 microns are indistinguishable from water when these collections are examined qualitatively by gray scale echography in a laboratory setting. E
Low levels of insoluble aggregates in protein formulations can sometimes only be detected by visual inspection. To overcome the subjectivity and other limitations associated with visual inspection, a microscopic technique based on filtration/staining was developed. This method is a simple modificati