Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8513542 Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 2018 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
Role of water in chemical (in)stability is revisited, with focus on deamidation in freeze-dried amorphous proteins and peptides. Two distinct patterns for deamidation versus water have been reported, that is, a consistent increase in rate constant with water, and a “hockey stick”-type behavior. For the latter, deamidation is essentially independent of water at lower water contents and accelerates when water content increases above a threshold value. Two simple kinetic models are developed to analyze literature-reported relationships between water content and deamidation rate constants. One model is based on catalytic role of water clusters in enabling proton transfer, which is a critical reaction step. Water clusters are formed when water content increases above a threshold value, while unclustered (and less catalytically-active) water molecules are predominant at lower water levels. The second model considers the dual role of water, as both a destabilizer via catalysis and a stabilizer of protein native structure. Considering that both models emphasize the importance of local structure and that local structure is intrinsically related to fast (and non-cooperative) relaxation modes, it is plausible to expect correlations between local mobility, such as beta-relaxation, and amorphous chemical instability.
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Health Sciences Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science Drug Discovery
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