4.7 Article

Viscosity-Lowering Effect of Amino Acids and Salts on Highly Concentrated Solutions of Two IgG1 Monoclonal Antibodies

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages 4478-4487

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.5b00643

Keywords

monoclonal antibody; viscosity; subcutaneous injection; amino acids; protein-protein interaction; mAb stability

Funding

  1. Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a pharmaceutical company of Johnson Johnson
  2. Center for Life Sciences at Tsinghua and Peking Universities (Beijing, China)
  3. China Recruitment Program of Global Experts
  4. Office of China Postdoctoral Council

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Monoclonal antibodies display complicated solution properties in highly concentrated (>100 mg/mL) formulations, such as high viscosity, high aggregation propensity, and low stability, among others, originating from protein protein interactions within the colloidal protein solution. These properties severely hinder the successful development of high-concentration mAb solution for subcutaneous injection. We hereby investigated the effects of several small-molecule excipients with diverse biophysical-chemical properties on the viscosity, aggregation propensity, and stability on two model IgG1 (JM1 and JM2) mAb formulations. These excipients include nine amino acids or their salt forms (Ala, Pro, Val, Gly, Ser, HisHCl, LysHCl, ArgHCl, and NaGlu), four representative salts (NaCl, NaAc, Na2SO4, and NH4Cl), and two chaotropic reagents (urea and GdnHCl). With only salts or amino acids in their salt-forms, significant decrease in viscosity was observed for JM1 (by up to 30 40%) and JM2 (by up to 50-80%) formulations, suggesting charge charge interaction between the mAbs dictates the high viscosity of these mAbs formulations. Most of these viscosity-lowering excipients did not induce substantial protein aggregation or changes in the secondary structure of the mAbs, as evidenced by HPLC-SEC, DSC, and FT-IR analysis, even in the absence of common protein stabilizers such as sugars and surfactants. Therefore, amino acids in their salt-forms and several common salts, such as ArgHCl, HisHCl, LysHCl, NaCl, Na2SO4, and NaAc, could potentially serve as viscosity-lowering excipients during highconcentration mAb formulation development.

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