Although freeze dried formulations are commonly characterized using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), a protein-rich system behaves as a ''strong glass'', and the glass transition temperature, T g , cannot be directly determined by DSC. A strong glass means a small heat capacity change at T g
Solid state stability of proteins III: Calorimetric (DSC) and spectroscopic (FTIR) characterization of thermal denaturation in freeze dried human growth hormone (hGH)
โ Scribed by Michael J. Pikal; Daniel Rigsbee; Michael L. Roy
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 249 KB
- Volume
- 97
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
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โฆ Synopsis
This research is a study of the changes in secondary structure (Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, FTIR), aggregation, and loss of the magnitude of the heat of denaturation upon scanning to and partially through the temperature range of the thermal denaturation peak of a model protein, human growth hormone (hGH). We study two formulations, a system of essentially pure protein (with a trace of phosphate buffer) and a system formulated with trehalose in a 3:1 trehalose:hGH weight ratio. The extent of denaturation is measured by loss of secondary structure by FTIR, the loss of heat of denaturation by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and the fraction of protein aggregated by HPLC. We examine loss of structure on heating to the DSC onset of thermal denaturation and restoration of structure by cooling below the denaturation temperature and holding to (nominally) allow time for refolding, and we also examine restoration of structure upon dissolving and refreeze drying samples heated to selected temperatures in the denaturation range. We find that denaturation occurs only above the glass transition temperature, is highly cooperative, and is only reversible by redissolving the ''denatured'' formulated (trehalose) solid. Further, all measures of the extent of denaturation are in essential agreement.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This research presents storage stability of human growth hormone, hGH, in lyophilized di-saccharide formulations. Stability via HPLC assay was assessed at 40 and 508C. Structure of the protein in the solids was assessed by infrared spectroscopy. Molecular mobility was characterized by structural rel