4.7 Article

Stabilizing Mechanisms of β-Lactoglobulin in Amorphous Solid Dispersions of Indomethacin

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages 3922-3933

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.2c00397

Keywords

amorphous solid dispersion; beta-lactoglobulin; molecular dynamics simulation; stability; hydrogen bonds; mobility; poorly soluble drugs

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council [201908210313]
  2. Swedish Research Council [2021-02092]
  3. NordForsk [85352]
  4. Swedish Research Council [2021-02092] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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This study investigates the impact of drug loading on the stability of protein-stabilized amorphous formulations, finding a second glass transition temperature at drug loadings higher than 40-50%. The simulations suggest that the mechanisms of drug stabilization by proteins involve reduced mobility of drug molecules in the first drug shell and hydrogen-bond networks.
Proteins, and in particular whey proteins, have recently been introduced as a promising excipient dass for stabilizing amorphous solid dispersions. However, despite the efficacy of the approach, the molecular mechanisms behind the stabilization of the drug in the amorphous form are not yet understood. To investigate these, we used experimental and computational techniques to study the impact of drug loading on the stability of protein-stabilized amorphous formulations. beta-Lactoglobulin, a major component of whey, was chosen as a model protein and indomethacin as a model drug. Samples, prepared by either ball milling or spray drying, formed single-phase amorphous solid dispersions with one glass transition temperature at drug loadings lower than 40-50%; however, a second glass transition temperature appeared at drug loadings higher than 40-50%. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we found that a drug-rich phase occurred at a loading of 40-50% and higher, in agreement with the experimental data. The simulations revealed that the mechanisms of the indomethacin stabilization by beta-lactoglobulin were a combination of (a) reduced mobility of the drug molecules in the first drug shell and (b) hydrogen-bond networks. These networks, formed mostly by glutamic and aspartic acids, are situated at the beta-lactoglobulin surface, and dependent on the drug loading (>40%), propagated into the second and subsequent drug layers. The simulations indicate that the reduced mobility dominates at low (<4096) drug loadings, whereas hydrogen-bond networks dominate at loadings up to 7596. The computer simulation results agreed with the experimental physical stability data, which showed a significant stabilization effect up to a drug fraction of 70% under dry storage. However, under humid conditions, stabilization was only sufficient for drug loadings up to 50%, confirming the detrimental effect of humidity on the stability of protein-stabilized amorphous formulations.

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