Monoclonal antibodies have been elicited against an achiral rhodium complex and this complex was used in the presence of a resultant antibody, 1G8, for the catalytic hydrogenation of 2-acetamidoacrylic acid to produce N-acetyl-L-alanine in high (>98%) enantiomeric excess.
There have been many presentations and discussions about the risks associated with glass prefilled syringes. Advanced ideas are being presented on the value of polymer-based syringes for improved safety, better strength, reduced protein aggregation, and the prevention of drug degradation. Drug degradation based on protein oxidation is discussed in this report. Identification of the main factors causing this degradation and possible solutions available by using polymer-based syringes will be presented. The causes of protein oxidation have been identified as dissolved oxygen and radicals generated by the applied method of sterilization. The oxidation reaction created by dissolved oxygen within the drug product can be effectively inhibited by controlling the removal of the oxygen through the use of a deoxygenated packaging system. This packaging system can control the level or complete removal of oxygen from the primary container and the secondary packaging system. Protein oxidation induced by the formation of radicals from sterilization by irradiation is another critical aspect where it was thought that various sterilization methods were acceptable without loosing drug product quality. However, this report is first to demonstrate that gamma sterilized polymer-based syringes accelerated protein oxidation by radical generation; this effect can be prevented by means of steam sterilization.
The effects of sterilization methods on the storage stability of erythropoietin (EPO) in polymer-based syringes were assessed by quantifying protein oxidation, aggregation, and particle formation. Micro-particle counting and size exclusion chromatography coupled with a multi-angle light scattering detector demonstrated much lower levels of protein particles and aggregates for EPO stored for 12 weeks in steam-sterilized than in radiation (Rad)-sterilized syringes. Intermediate levels of damage were observed for EPO stored in ethylene oxide-sterilized syringes. HPLC analysis documented that the Rad-sterilized syringes caused increased oxidation of the protein during storage. In contrast, in the steam- and ethylene oxide-sterilized syringes EPO oxidation did not change. Analysis with electron spin resonance revealed that only Rad-sterilized syringes formed radicals in the syringe body, which persisted over the 12-week storage period. These results demonstrated that Rad-sterilization generated radicals in the syringes which in turn caused increased EPO oxidation, particle formation, and protein aggregation. Therefore, steam sterilization was shown to be a preferable sterilization method for the polymer-based syringe system when using biopharmaceutical drugs highly sensitive to oxidation, and particle formation and aggregation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.